And make more queries non-interned.
Also flip the default for queries, now the default is to not intern and to intern a query you need to say `invoke_interned`.
This PR touches a lot of parts. But the main changes are changing
`hir_expand::Name` to be raw edition-dependently and only when necessary
(unrelated to how the user originally wrote the identifier),
and changing `is_keyword()` and `is_raw_identifier()` to be edition-aware
(this was done in #17896, but the FIXMEs were fixed here).
It is possible that I missed some cases, but most IDE parts should properly
escape (or not escape) identifiers now.
The rules of thumb are:
- If we show the identifier to the user, its rawness should be determined
by the edition of the edited crate. This is nice for IDE features,
but really important for changes we insert to the source code.
- For tests, I chose `Edition::CURRENT` (so we only have to (maybe) update
tests when an edition becomes stable, to avoid churn).
- For debugging tools (helper methods and logs), I used `Edition::LATEST`.
This partially reverts #17350, based on the feedback in #17397.
If we don't have an autofix, it's more annoying to highlight the whole line.
This heuristic fixes the diagnostic overwhelming the user during startup.
Currently, rust-analyzer highlights the entire region when a `cfg` is
inactive (e.g. `#[cfg(windows)]` on a Linux machine). However,
unlinked files only highlight the first three characters of the file.
This was introduced in #8444, but users have repeatedly found
themselves with no rust-analyzer support for a file and unsure
why (see e.g. #13226 and the intentionally prominent pop-up added in
PR #14366).
(Anecdotally, we see this issue bite our users regularly, particularly
people new to Rust.)
Instead, highlight the entire inactive file, but mark it as all as
unused. This allows users to hover and run the quickfix from any line.
Whilst this is marginally more prominent, it's less invasive than a
pop-up, and users do want to know why they're getting no rust-analyzer
support in certain files.
Map our diagnostics to rustc and clippy's ones
And control their severity by lint attributes `#[allow]`, `#[deny]` and ... .
It doesn't work with proc macros and I would like to fix that before merge but I don't know how to do it.
This makes code more readale and concise,
moving all format arguments like `format!("{}", foo)`
into the more compact `format!("{foo}")` form.
The change was automatically created with, so there are far less change
of an accidental typo.
```
cargo clippy --fix -- -A clippy::all -W clippy::uninlined_format_args
```