Allows you to ignore certain buffers. Helpful for plugins that manage
their own windows, like magit.
To use:
(set! :popup "^\\*magit" :ignore)
Relevant to #337
This is experimental and disabled by default. It uses a slightly more
primitive backend that will stack popups away from the edge of the
frame. This will need more work to take window-slot into account.
To use it:
(remove-hook '+popup-display-buffer-actions 'display-buffer-in-side-window)
(add-hook '+popup-display-buffer-actions #'+popup-display-buffer t)
lang/org's initialization process is now split up into hooks on
org-load-hook. This approach is cleaner and easier to customize. I also
removed the escape binding in org-agenda-mode-map, as the popup system
makes it redundant.
Added +ivy-recentf-transformer to counsel-recentf. Entries that aren't
in the same project as the buffer recentf was opened from will be
slightly dimmed.
This makes quickrun, *doom eval* and *Pp Eval Output* buffers behave
better.
Eval output buffers should a) shrink themselves to the size of their
output (within reason), b) *not* grab focus, and c) be easy to close
from afar with C-g/Escape.
Gotchas:
1. Quickrun gets output asynchronously, so we shrink it on
quickrun-after-run-hook, not in the popup rule.
2. *doom eval* and *Pp Eval Output* opens with its output ready, so the
popup system may shrink those to fit.
3. *doom eval* and *Pp Eval Output* handle window selection themselves.
Let them by setting the select window parameter to #'ignore.
Much of my work getting dashboard to behave across GUI, tty and daemon
Emacs is already done with initial-buffer-choice, so I cut down on my
own code and exploit that instead. Needs more testing.
The former +ivy/switch-workspace-buffer constructed its own collection
of buffers, so ivy-use-virtual-buffers would have no effect on it. Use
internal-complete-buffer instead and ivy-read will know what to do under
the hood.
+ivy-buffer-transformer does *most* of what ivy-rich does, so lets cut down on
our own code, bring in ivy-rich, and add our customizations on top of it.
This fixes ivy-use-virtual-buffers support, too.
A buffer can find other, unexpected ways to kill itself, so we set up
a kill-buffer-hook to make sure we're there to catch them. Not all
heroes wear capes.
The window parameters of popup windows weren't being set in Emacs 25.x. Turns
out `display-buffer-alist`'s ALIST argument didn't support the
windows-parameters alist entry until Emacs 26.