featurep! will be renamed modulep! in the future, so it's been
deprecated. They have identical interfaces, and can be replaced without
issue.
featurep! was never quite the right name for this macro. It implied that
it had some connection to featurep, which it doesn't (only that it was
similar in purpose; still, Doom modules are not features). To undo such
implications and be consistent with its namespace (and since we're
heading into a storm of breaking changes with the v3 release anyway),
now was the best opportunity to begin the transition.
Setting the rules explicitly was preventing users from customizing how
xwidget popups should behave, so it was moved to the popup module as a
global default.
process, timer, abbreviations, output, occur buffers are all better
displayed in a maximized fashion. Otherwise, they aren't really useful.
Signed-off-by: Rudi Grinberg <me@rgrinberg.com>
This update may potentially break your usage of add-hook! if you pass
the :local or :append properties to it. This is how they used to work:
(add-hook! :append 'some-mode-hook #'do-something)
Thsoe properties must now follow the hooks, e.g.
(add-hook! 'some-mode-hook :append #'do-something)
Other changes:
- Various add-hook calls have been renamed to add-hook! because I
incorrectly assumed `defun` always returned its definition's symbol,
when in fact, its return value is "undefined" (so sayeth the
documentation). This should fix#1597.
- This update adds the ability to add multiple functions to hooks
without a list:
(add-hook! 'some-mode-hook
#'do-something
#'do-something-else)
- The indentation logic has been changed so that consecutive function
symbols at indented at the same level as the first argument, but forms
are indent like a defun.
(add-hook! 'some-mode-hook
#'do-something
#'do-something-else)
(add-hook! 'some-mode-hook
(message "Hello"))
:feature was a "catch-all" category. Many of its modules fit better in
other categories, so they've been moved:
- feature/debugger -> tools/debugger
- feature/evil -> editor/evil
- feature/eval -> tools/eval
- feature/lookup -> tools/lookup
- feature/snippets -> editor/snippets
- feature/file-templates -> editor/file-templates
- feature/workspaces -> ui/workspaces
More potential changes in the future:
- A new :term category for terminal emulation modules (eshell, term and
vterm).
- A new :os category for modules dedicated to os-specific functionality.
The :tools macos module would fit here, but so would modules for nixos
and arch.
- A new :services category for web-service integration, like wakatime,
twitter, elfeed, gist and pastebin services.
This would cause +popup/raise to reuse non-popup windows when raising
popups. If this doesn't work, it may be necessary to write a specialized
display-buffer-reuse-window to only reuse popups, specifically.
- Adds doom/open-project-scratch-buffer (persistent project scratch
buffers)
- Prefix arg = open scratch buffer in current window, for both
doom/open-scratch-buffer and doom/open-project-scratch-buffer.
- Rename doom/delete-scratch-files ->
doom/delete-persistent-scratch-file
- Remove doom-scratch-buffer-display-fn
- Rename doom-scratch-files-dir -> doom-scratch-dir
- Add SPC p s keybind to open project scratch buffer
These weren't reliable, often times buggy or overzealous about killing
buffers and processes. Best to do it manually or come up with a better
solution.
This is experimental. I'd eventually like users to be able to management
Doom from inside Emacs, if they desire. This may be the only way to have
a decent user experience on Windows, for that matter.
Also adds a popup rule for it.
+ Uses alist variable to store config, rather than hooks
+ Added check for installed docsets in +lookup/documentation
+ Set docsets for various language modules (c-mode, c++-mode, css-mode,
scss-mode, sass-mode, web-mode, go-mode, racket-mode, emacs-lisp-mode,
js2-mode, rjsx-mode, typescript-mode, rust-mode, and php-mode)
+ Made *eww* popups for dash docsets larger
+ Renamed set-docset! => set-docsets! (set-docset! is aliased to
set-docsets!)
+ New +lookup/install-docset alias
After some profiling, it turns out map-put and map-delete are 5-7x
slower (more on Emacs 25) than delq, setf/alist-get and add-to-list for
small lists (under 250 items), which is exactly how I've been using
them.
The only caveat is alist-get's signature is different on Emacs 25, thus
a polyfill is necessary in core-lib.
+ High vslot = unlikely to be replaced by other popups.
+ Make it large; backtraces are important!
+ Don't allow ESC to close it. It must be done manually, with q or zx
Now accepts a flat plist of all its former parameters, including new
:parameters and :actions properties to increase your control over the
fate of your windows.
The old usage of set-popup-rule! is deprecated and may not work right!
The :ui popup module has also seen a major refactor to improve
efficiency and load times.
Sorry! This is the last "big" change before 2.1!