Merge pull request #19220 from Shourya742/2025-02-24-nit-setup-doc

doc: remove nit from setup.md
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Laurențiu Nicola 2025-02-26 15:31:24 +00:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -17,10 +17,13 @@ Since rust-analyzer is a Rust project, you will need to install Rust. You can do
**Step 04**: Install the language server locally by running the following command:
```sh
cargo xtask install --server --code-bin code-insiders --dev-rel
# Install only the language server
cargo xtask install --server \
--code-bin code-insiders \ # Target a specific editor (code, code-exploration, code-insiders, codium, or code-oss)
--dev-rel # Build in release mode with debug info level 2
```
In the output of this command, there should be a file path provided to the installed binary on your local machine.
In the output of this command, there should be a file path provided to the installed binary on your local machine.
It should look something like the following output below:
```
@ -48,9 +51,12 @@ An example debugging statement could go into the `main_loop.rs` file which can b
```rs
eprintln!("Hello, world!");
```
Now, run the following commands to check the project and reinstall the server:
Now we run `cargo build` and `sh
cargo xtask install --server --code-bin code-insiders --dev-rel` to reinstall the server.
```sh
cargo check
cargo xtask install --server --code-bin code-insiders --dev-rel
```
Now on Visual Studio Code Insiders, we should be able to open the Output tab on our terminal and switch to Rust Analyzer Language Server to see the `eprintln!` statement we just wrote.