Fixed let
/letm
snippet for Rust files.
When expanding the `let` pattern, one would end up with something like "let I: I${4:type} = I;" (I representing the cursor jump marks), so the nested jump marks are inserted literally. I fixed that unwanted behaviour by replacing the `let` and `letm` patterns by `let` (for immutable variable bindings with type inference), `lett` (for immutable variable bindings with explicit type annotation), `letm` (for mutable variable bindings with type inference) and `lettm` (for mutable variable bindings with explicit type annotation).
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@ -31,10 +31,14 @@ snippet main "Main function"
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pub fn main() {
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${0}
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}
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snippet let "let variable declaration"
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let ${1:name}${2:: ${3:type}} = ${4};
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snippet letm "let mut variable declaration"
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let mut ${1:name}${2:: ${3:type}} = ${4};
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snippet let "let variable declaration with type inference"
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let ${1} = ${2};
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snippet lett "let variable declaration with explicit type annotation"
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let ${1}: ${2} = ${2};
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snippet letm "let mut variable declaration with type inference"
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let ${1} = ${2};
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snippet lettm "let mut variable declaration with explicit type annotation"
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let ${1}: ${2} = ${2};
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snippet pln "println!"
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println!("${1}");
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snippet pln, "println! with format param"
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