This commit changes from cargo2nix to just use `buildRustPackage`, which
does not generate itermediate crate derivations for the build. This
means that we lose dependency caching (for CI as well), but on the other
hand it becomes much more cacheable for people that actually use Nix to
add the dependencies.
This was trickier than expected as the expression parser, and in particular the bin-op parser will interpret negative patterns as a continuation of a binary operation and eventually choke on the next right-arrow symbol. This is due to how we actually completely erase newlines once we're done with the lexer. The newline separating when clause is actually semantically important. In principle, we could only parse an expression until the next newline.
Ideally, we would keep that newline in the list of token but it's difficult to figure out which newline to keep between two right arrows since a clause guard can be written over multiple lines. Though, since we know that this is only truly a problem for negative integers, we can use the same trick as for tuples and define a new 'NewLineMinus' token. That token CANNOT be part of a binop expression. That means it's impossible to write a binary operation with a minus over multiple lines, or more specifically, with the '-' symbol on a newline. This sounds like a fair limitation. What we get in exchange is less ambiguity when parsing patterns following expressions in when clause cases.
Another more cumbersome option could be to preserve the first newline encountered after a 'right-arrow' symbol and before any parenthesis or curly brace is found (which would otherwise signal the beginning of a new block). That requires to traverse, at least partially, the list of tokens twice. This feels unnecessary for now and until we do face a similar issue with a binary operator.
The main goal is to make the parser more reusable to be used for when-clauses, instead of the expression parser. A side goal has been to make it more readable by moving the construction of some untyped expression as method on UntypedExpr. Doing so, I got rid of the extra temporary 'ParseArg' type and re-used the generic 'CallArg' instead by simply using an Option<UntypedExpr> as value to get the same semantic as 'ParseArg' (which would distinguish between plain call args and holes). Now the chained parser is in a bit more reusable state.
We do not actually every parse negative values in there, as a negative value is a combination of a 'Negate' and 'UInt' expression.
However, for patterns and constant, it'll be simpler to parse whole Int values as there's no ambiguity with arithmetic operations
there. To avoid confusion of having some 'Int' constructors containing only non-negative values, and some being on the whole range,
I've renamed the constructor to 'UInt' to make this more obvious.