- Renamed doom/open-vanilla-sandbox to doom/sandbox (because it's not
just for vanilla testing anymore)
- Renamed doom/open-bug-report to doom/report-bug (for consistency with
`report-emacs-bug`; makes it easier to discover)
- Add SPC h d b for doom/report-bug
- Add SPC h d s for doom/sandbox
Adds the following commands:
- doom/help (opens the Doom manual)
- doom/help-search (for searching through org headlines in Doom's
documentation)
- doom/help-faq (for searching the FAQ)
- doom/help-news (for browsing the Doom newsletters)
- doom/help-autodefs (renamed from doom/describe-autodef -- for looking
up documentation on autodef function/macros, like
`set-lookup-handler!`)
- doom/help-modules (renamed from doom/describe-module, for jumping to a
Doom module's documentation)
- doom/help-packages (renamed from doom/describe-package and recently
fixed -- looks up information about installed packages, including what
Doom module(s) install it and where it is configured)
- doom/help-package-config (for searching and jumping to any block where
a package is configured in Doom Emacs)
Also adds the SPC h d (or C-h d) prefix for Doom-specific help commands.
SPC h D will invoke doom/help.
However, the documentation itself hasn't been committed yet, so some of
these commands may be useless atm. Sorry!
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.
- Move profiler from 't' to 'T' (as not to override
`help-with-tutorial', esp for non-evil users)
- Replace C-c (describe-copying) with describe-coding-system
- Bind doom/describe-symbol to 'h'
- Bind `describe-key-briefly' to 'C-k'
Done to better facilitate a non-evil config.
- Adds winum (and enables support for it in doom-modeline)
- Adds expand-region (#1231)
- Uses default smartparens config for non-evil users (WIP)
This makes text insertion behave more like traditional editors.
Delete-selection-mode allows selections to be replaced when yanking or
inserting. This enables it by default for non-evil users and in insert
mode for evil users. Also enables selecting text with shift.
On MacOS, command used to be 'meta, which Emacs (and many packages) use
for many keybinds. I don't want to pollute the command key, so it is now
meta (as is the Emacs default).
The MacOS keybind fixes have been moved back to super.