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path: root/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pprust
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2022-10-27Revert "Do not consider method call receiver as an argument in AST."Michael Goulet-9/+5
This reverts commit 970184528718d7c10579cac7b7e7e66ef2e2a3f5.
2022-09-14make `mk_attr_id` part of `ParseSess`SparrowLii-2/+4
2022-09-06Auto merge of #101241 - camsteffen:refactor-binding-annotations, r=cjgillotbors-16/+10
`BindingAnnotation` refactor * `ast::BindingMode` is deleted and replaced with `hir::BindingAnnotation` (which is moved to `ast`) * `BindingAnnotation` is changed from an enum to a tuple struct e.g. `BindingAnnotation(ByRef::No, Mutability::Mut)` * Associated constants added for convenience `BindingAnnotation::{NONE, REF, MUT, REF_MUT}` One goal is to make it more clear that `BindingAnnotation` merely represents syntax `ref mut` and not the actual binding mode. This was especially confusing since we had `ast::BindingMode`->`hir::BindingAnnotation`->`thir::BindingMode`. I wish there were more symmetry between `ByRef` and `Mutability` (variant) naming (maybe `Mutable::Yes`?), and I also don't love how long the name `BindingAnnotation` is, but this seems like the best compromise. Ideas welcome.
2022-09-03Fix global_asm macro pretty printingMichael Goulet-0/+2
2022-09-02Refactor and re-use BindingAnnotationCameron Steffen-16/+10
2022-08-17Rollup merge of #100018 - nnethercote:clean-up-LitKind, r=petrochenkovMatthias Krüger-1/+1
Clean up `LitKind` r? ``@petrochenkov``
2022-08-16Rename some things related to literals.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+1
- Rename `ast::Lit::token` as `ast::Lit::token_lit`, because its type is `token::Lit`, which is not a token. (This has been confusing me for a long time.) reasonable because we have an `ast::token::Lit` inside an `ast::Lit`. - Rename `LitKind::{from,to}_lit_token` as `LitKind::{from,to}_token_lit`, to match the above change and `token::Lit`.
2022-08-16Shrink `ast::Attribute`.Nicholas Nethercote-2/+2
2022-08-11Rollup merge of #100350 - jhpratt:stringify-vis, r=cjgillotMatthias Krüger-2/+2
Stringify non-shorthand visibility correctly This makes `stringify!(pub(in crate))` evaluate to `pub(in crate)` rather than `pub(crate)`, matching the behavior before the `crate` shorthand was removed. Further, this changes `stringify!(pub(in super))` to evaluate to `pub(in super)` rather than the current `pub(super)`. If the latter is not desired (it is _technically_ breaking), it can be undone. Fixes #99981 `@rustbot` label +C-bug +regression-from-stable-to-beta +T-compiler
2022-08-10Do not consider method call receiver as an argument in AST.Camille GILLOT-5/+9
2022-08-09Stringify non-shorthand visibility correctlyJacob Pratt-2/+2
2022-08-04Enable unused_parens for match armswcampbell-1/+1
2022-07-29Remove `TreeAndSpacing`.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+5
A `TokenStream` contains a `Lrc<Vec<(TokenTree, Spacing)>>`. But this is not quite right. `Spacing` makes sense for `TokenTree::Token`, but does not make sense for `TokenTree::Delimited`, because a `TokenTree::Delimited` cannot be joined with another `TokenTree`. This commit fixes this problem, by adding `Spacing` to `TokenTree::Token`, changing `TokenStream` to contain a `Lrc<Vec<TokenTree>>`, and removing the `TreeAndSpacing` typedef. The commit removes these two impls: - `impl From<TokenTree> for TokenStream` - `impl From<TokenTree> for TreeAndSpacing` These were useful, but also resulted in code with many `.into()` calls that was hard to read, particularly for anyone not highly familiar with the relevant types. This commit makes some other changes to compensate: - `TokenTree::token()` becomes `TokenTree::token_{alone,joint}()`. - `TokenStream::token_{alone,joint}()` are added. - `TokenStream::delimited` is added. This results in things like this: ```rust TokenTree::token(token::Semi, stmt.span).into() ``` changing to this: ```rust TokenStream::token_alone(token::Semi, stmt.span) ``` This makes the type of the result, and its spacing, clearer. These changes also simplifies `Cursor` and `CursorRef`, because they no longer need to distinguish between `next` and `next_with_spacing`.
2022-07-12Parse closure bindersMaybe Waffle-0/+11
This is first step in implementing RFC 3216. - Parse `for<'a>` before closures in ast - Error in lowering - Add `closure_lifetime_binder` feature
2022-07-02ast: Add span to `Extern`Nixon Enraght-Moony-2/+2
2022-06-16Fix pretty printing of empty type bound lists in where-clauseDavid Tolnay-49/+72
2022-06-02Revert #96682.Nicholas Nethercote-18/+5
The change was "Show invisible delimiters (within comments) when pretty printing". It's useful to show these delimiters, but is a breaking change for some proc macros. Fixes #97608.
2022-05-23Rollup merge of #97254 - jhpratt:remove-crate-vis, r=cjgillotDylan DPC-5/+1
Remove feature: `crate` visibility modifier FCP completed in #53120.
2022-05-22rustc_parse: Move AST -> TokenStream conversion logic to `rustc_ast`Vadim Petrochenkov-31/+1
2022-05-21Merge crate and restricted visibilitiesJacob Pratt-2/+1
2022-05-21Remove feature: `crate` visibility modifierJacob Pratt-4/+1
2022-05-20Remove `crate` visibility usage in compilerJacob Pratt-34/+39
2022-05-18use `CursorRef` more, to not to clone `Tree`sklensy-2/+2
2022-05-11ast: Introduce some traits to get AST node properties genericallyVadim Petrochenkov-3/+41
And use them to avoid constructing some artificial `Nonterminal` tokens during expansion
2022-05-05Rollup merge of #96682 - nnethercote:show-invisible-delims, r=petrochenkovMatthias Krüger-5/+18
Show invisible delimeters (within comments) when pretty printing. Because invisible syntax is really hard to work with! r? `@petrochenkov`
2022-05-04Auto merge of #96546 - nnethercote:overhaul-MacArgs, r=petrochenkovbors-8/+20
Overhaul `MacArgs` Motivation: - Clarify some code that I found hard to understand. - Eliminate one use of three places where `TokenKind::Interpolated` values are created. r? `@petrochenkov`
2022-05-05Overhaul `MacArgs::Eq`.Nicholas Nethercote-3/+14
The value in `MacArgs::Eq` is currently represented as a `Token`. Because of `TokenKind::Interpolated`, `Token` can be either a token or an arbitrary AST fragment. In practice, a `MacArgs::Eq` starts out as a literal or macro call AST fragment, and then is later lowered to a literal token. But this is very non-obvious. `Token` is a much more general type than what is needed. This commit restricts things, by introducing a new type `MacArgsEqKind` that is either an AST expression (pre-lowering) or an AST literal (post-lowering). The downside is that the code is a bit more verbose in a few places. The benefit is that makes it much clearer what the possibilities are (though also shorter in some other places). Also, it removes one use of `TokenKind::Interpolated`, taking us a step closer to removing that variant, which will let us make `Token` impl `Copy` and remove many "handle Interpolated" code paths in the parser. Things to note: - Error messages have improved. Messages like this: ``` unexpected token: `"bug" + "found"` ``` now say "unexpected expression", which makes more sense. Although arbitrary expressions can exist within tokens thanks to `TokenKind::Interpolated`, that's not obvious to anyone who doesn't know compiler internals. - In `parse_mac_args_common`, we no longer need to collect tokens for the value expression.
2022-05-04Show invisible delimeters (within comments) when pretty printing.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+18
2022-04-30Add `do yeet` expressions to allow experimentation in nightlyScott McMurray-1/+13
Using an obviously-placeholder syntax. An RFC would still be needed before this could have any chance at stabilization, and it might be removed at any point. But I'd really like to have it in nightly at least to ensure it works well with try_trait_v2, especially as we refactor the traits.
2022-04-29Tweak `print_attr_item`.Nicholas Nethercote-7/+8
This commit rearranges the `match`. The new code avoids testing for `MacArgs::Eq` twice, at the cost of repeating the `self.print_path()` call. I think this is worthwhile because it puts the `match` in a more standard and readable form.
2022-04-28rustc_ast: Harmonize delimiter naming with `proc_macro::Delimiter`Vadim Petrochenkov-13/+15
2022-04-27Avoid producing `NoDelim` values in `MacArgs::delim()`.Nicholas Nethercote-18/+20
2022-04-16Rollup merge of #94985 - dtolnay:constattr, r=pnkfelixDylan DPC-4/+15
Parse inner attributes on inline const block According to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/84414#issuecomment-826150936, inner attributes are intended to be supported *"in all containers for statements (or some subset of statements)"*. This PR adds inner attribute parsing and pretty-printing for inline const blocks (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76001), which contain statements just like an unsafe block or a loop body. ```rust let _ = const { #![allow(...)] let x = (); x }; ```
2022-04-14Reimplement lowering of sym operands for asm! so that it also works with ↵Amanieu d'Antras-2/+6
global_asm!
2022-03-28Remove `Nonterminal::NtTT`.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+0
It's only needed for macro expansion, not as a general element in the AST. This commit removes it, adds `NtOrTt` for the parser and macro expansion cases, and renames the variants in `NamedMatch` to better match the new type.
2022-03-15Parse inner attributes on inline const blockDavid Tolnay-4/+15
2022-03-05Change syntax for TyAlias where clausesJack Huey-4/+34
2022-02-07Pretty print ItemKind::Use in rustfmt styleDavid Tolnay-15/+35
2022-02-03Change struct expr pretty printing to match rustfmt styleDavid Tolnay-31/+83
2022-02-03Change pp indent to signed to allow negative indentsDavid Tolnay-1/+1
2022-01-30Restore a visual alignment mode for block commentsDavid Tolnay-1/+1
2022-01-30Fix some double indents on exprs containing blocksDavid Tolnay-10/+18
The `print_expr` method already places an `ibox(INDENT_UNIT)` around every expr that gets printed. Some exprs were then using `self.head` inside of that, which does its own `cbox(INDENT_UNIT)`, resulting in two levels of indentation: while true { stuff; } This commit fixes those cases to produce the expected single level of indentation within every expression containing a block. while true { stuff; }
2022-01-30Compute indent never relative to current columnDavid Tolnay-1/+1
Previously the pretty printer would compute indentation always relative to whatever column a block begins at, like this: fn demo(arg1: usize, arg2: usize); This is never the thing to do in the dominant contemporary Rust style. Rustfmt's default and the style used by the vast majority of Rust codebases is block indentation: fn demo( arg1: usize, arg2: usize, ); where every indentation level is a multiple of 4 spaces and each level is indented relative to the indentation of the previous line, not the position that the block starts in.
2022-01-27try apply `rustc_pass_by_value` to `Span`lcnr-3/+3
2022-01-19Rollup merge of #93065 - dtolnay:ringbuffer, r=lcnrMatthias Krüger-8/+12
Pretty printer algorithm revamp step 2 This PR follows #92923 as a second chunk of modernizations backported from https://github.com/dtolnay/prettyplease into rustc_ast_pretty. I've broken this up into atomic commits that hopefully are sensible in isolation. At every commit, the pretty printer is compilable and has runtime behavior that is identical to before and after the PR. None of the refactoring so far changes behavior. The general theme of this chunk of commits is: the logic in the old pretty printer is doing some very basic things (pushing and popping tokens on a ring buffer) but expressed in a too-low-level way that I found makes it quite complicated/subtle to reason about. There are a number of obvious invariants that are "almost true" -- things like `self.left == self.buf.offset` and `self.right == self.buf.offset + self.buf.data.len()` and `self.right_total == self.left_total + self.buf.data.sum()`. The reason these things are "almost true" is the implementation tends to put updating one side of the invariant unreasonably far apart from updating the other side, leaving the invariant broken while unrelated stuff happens in between. The following code from master is an example of this: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/e5e2b0be26ea177527b60d355bd8f56cd473bd00/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pp.rs#L314-L317 In this code the `advance_right` is reserving an entry into which to write a next token on the right side of the ring buffer, the `check_stack` is doing something totally unrelated to the right boundary of the ring buffer, and the `scan_push` is actually writing the token we previously reserved space for. Much of what this PR is doing is rearranging code to shrink the amount of stuff in between when an invariant is broken to when it is restored, until the whole thing can be factored out into one indivisible method call on the RingBuffer type. The end state of the PR is that we can entirely eliminate `self.left` (because it's now just equal to `self.buf.offset` always) and `self.right` (because it's equal to `self.buf.offset + self.buf.data.len()` always) and the whole `Token::Eof` state which used to be the value of tokens that have been reserved space for but not yet written. I found without these changes the pretty printer implementation to be hard to reason about and I wasn't able to confidently introduce improvements like trailing commas in `prettyplease` until after this refactor. The logic here is 43 years old at this point (Graydon translated it as directly as possible from the 1979 pretty printing paper) and while there are advantages to following the paper as closely as possible, in `prettyplease` I decided if we're going to adapt the algorithm to work better for Rust syntax, it was worthwhile making it easier to follow than the original.
2022-01-18Eliminate eof token stateDavid Tolnay-8/+12
2022-01-18Move item-related pretty printing functions to moduleDavid Tolnay-636/+646
2022-01-18Move expr-related pretty printing functions to moduleDavid Tolnay-564/+574
2022-01-17Use Term in ProjectionPredicatekadmin-3/+1
ProjectionPredicate should be able to handle both associated types and consts so this adds the first step of that. It mainly just pipes types all the way down, not entirely sure how to handle consts, but hopefully that'll come with time.
2022-01-17Add termkadmin-7/+6
Instead of having a separate enum variant for types and consts have one but have either a const or type.