As of 56e9d273e, these commands no longer toggle because the toggle was
brittle could be unpredictable at times. Use winner-undo instead (on
`C-w r` or `SPC w r` by default).
+ No longer toggle window conf on consecutive presses. It's redundant
with winner-undo and only adds a degree of uncertainty to the command.
+ `doom/window-maximize-buffer` now works with popup windows (before
it'd spout an unhelp error about running +popup/raise).
Doom's narrow/widen commands will now narrow/widen incrementally (using
indirect buffer clones). If the prefix arg is passed to the widen
command, kill all indirect buffers and widen the parent buffer.
This is second of three big naming convention changes. In this commit,
we change the naming conventions for hook functions and variable
functions:
1. Replace the bar | to indicate a hook function with a -h suffix, e.g.
doom|init-ui -> doom-init-ui-h
doom|run-local-var-hooks -> doom-run-local-var-hooks-h
2. And add a -fn suffix for functions meant to be set on variables,
e.g.
(setq magit-display-buffer-function #'+magit-display-buffer-fn)
See ccf327f8 for the reasoning behind these changes.
This is first of three big naming convention updates that have been a
long time coming. With 2.1 on the horizon, all the breaking updates will
batched together in preparation for the long haul.
In this commit, we do away with the asterix to communicate that a
function is an advice function, and we replace it with the '-a' suffix.
e.g.
doom*shut-up -> doom-shut-up-a
doom*recenter -> doom-recenter-a
+evil*static-reindent -> +evil--static-reindent-a
The rationale behind this change is:
1. Elisp's own formatting/indenting tools would occasionally struggle
with | and * (particularly pp and cl-prettyprint). They have no
problem with / and :, fortunately.
2. External syntax highlighters (like pygmentize, discord markdown or
github markdown) struggle with it, sometimes refusing to highlight
code beyond these symbols.
3. * and | are less expressive than - and -- in communicating the
intended visibility, versatility and stability of a function.
4. It complicated the regexps we must use to search for them.
5. They were arbitrary and over-complicated to begin with, decided
on haphazardly way back when Doom was simply "my private config".
Anyhow, like how predicate functions have the -p suffix, we'll adopt the
-a suffix for advice functions, -h for hook functions and -fn for
variable functions.
Other noteable changes:
- Replaces advice-{add,remove}! macro with new def-advice!
macro. The old pair weren't as useful. The new def-advice! saves on a
lot of space.
- Removed "stage" assertions to make sure you were using the right
macros in the right place. Turned out to not be necessary, we'll
employ better checks later.
IMPORTANT: This is a breaking update for Mac users, as your shell
environment will no longer be inherited correctly (with the removal of
exec-path-from-shell). The quick fix is: 'bin/doom env refresh'. Also,
the set-env! autodef now does nothing (and is deprecated), be sure to
remove calls to it in your config.
Smaller changes:
+ This update also adds --no-* switches to doom quickstart
+ Includes general improvements to the documentation of several bin/doom
commands.
+ Moves doom/reload* commands to core/autoload/config.el
+ doom/reload-project has been removed (it didn't actually do anything)
The breaking change:
This update adds an "envvar file" to Doom Emacs. This file is generated
by `doom env refresh`, populated with variables scraped from your shell
environment (from both non-interactive and interactive sessions). This
file is then (inexpensively) loaded at startup, if it exists.
+ The file is manually generated with `doom env refresh`.
+ It can be regenerated automatically whenever `doom refresh` is run by
running `doom env enable` (`doom env clear` will reverse this and
delete the env file).
+ `doom quickstart` will ask if you want to auto-generate this envvar
file. You won't need it if you're confident Emacs will always be
started from the correct environment, however.
+ Your env file can be reloaded from a running Emacs session with `M-x
doom/reload-env`. Note: this won't work if the Emacs session you're
running it in doesn't have a correct SHELL set. i.e. don't use this to
create your first env file!
The idea isn't mine -- it's borrowed from Spacemacs -- and was
introduced to me in #1053 by @yurimx. I was impressed with it. Prior to
this, I was unhappy with exec-path-from-shell (no hate to the dev, I
understand its necessity), and 'doom patch-macos' wasn't ideal for mac
users (needed to be reapplied every time you update Emacs). What's more,
many users (even Linux users) had to install exec-path-from-shell
anyway.
This solution suffers from none of their shortcomings. More reliable
than patch-macos, more performant and complete than
exec-path-from-shell, and easily handled by bin/doom.
- Code reduction and refactor across the board (cull unneeded minor
advise, hooks and hacks or update them)
- Revise outdated comments and docstrings
- Reorganize core autoload libraries
- Remove large file check (Emacs already has a built-in one, which we
augment to be even more performant when it does kick in)
- helpful.el can now be disabled completely through package!
A minor optimization. assq is significantly faster than assoc (not that
it matters for this incredibly insignificant use-case, but yay for
premature optimization!)
Checking for the 'display-line-numbers symbol property is clumsy and
checking for boundp is pointless now that we have a Emacs 25 polyfill
for display-line-numbers-mode.
+ Remove doom/switch-theme (replaced with an advice for load-theme)
+ Reorganize core-ui
+ Fix Emacs 26+ hl-line hack being applied for Emacs 25 users
+ Rename doom|show-whitespace-maybe to doom|highlight-non-default-indentation
+ Disable tool-bar, menu-bar and vertical-scroll-bars via
default-frame-alist; this is a little faster than using the minor
modes.
load-theme doesn't disable previously enabled themes before switching.
doom/switch-theme does.
This remaps any keys bound to load-theme to doom/switch-theme.
This naming convention was meant to be for batch commands, but it grew
to include "commands that were helpful with managing Doom", but many of
these commands shouldn't be interactive in the first place!