: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.
By not using variable-pitch fonts in the SHR-converted output and
allowing images to be larger than 60% of the window's width.
Also corrects the docstring for +rss|elfeed-wrap, promising to use
`visual-fill-column-mode` when it doesn't (and never did).
Also changes `=rss` to an alias.
+rss/quit kills the buffer, triggering its kill-buffer-hook, which calls
+rss/quit, triggering its kill-buffer-hook, which calls +rss/quit,
triggering its kill-buffer-hook, which calls +rss/quit, triggering its
kill-buffer-hook, which calls +rss/quit, triggering its
kill-buffer-hook, which calls +rss/quit, triggering its
kill-buffer-hook, which calls +rss/quit, triggering its
kill-buffer-hook, which calls +rss/quit, which summons Cthulhu...
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!
+ :popup -> set-popup-rule!
+ :popups -> set-popup-rules!
+ :company-backend -> set-company-backend!
+ :evil-state -> set-evil-initial-state!
I am slowly phasing out the setting system (def-setting! and set!),
starting with these.
What are autodefs? These are functions that are always defined, whether
or not their respective modules are enabled. However, when their modules
are disabled, they are replaced with macros that no-op and don't
waste time evaluating their arguments.
The old set! function will still work, for a while.
I prefer not to invent new variables when they aren't strictly
necessary. org-directory is one such variable (although the other path
variables are still necessary).
+ Group hooks with add-hook!
+ Sharpquote elfeed call
+ Extract elfeed buffer detector into function and ensure idempotency of
doom-real-buffer-functions
This is in preparation for general.el integration coming in 2.1.1. It is
very likely that map! will change (and even more, be split into several
macros). Not much, but change none-the-less. Specifically, the state
keywords (e.g. :nvi, :n, :i) will be removed in favor of a :state
property that takes a list, e.g. (normal visual insert).
In any case, both map! and general are also relatively expensive
compared to define-key and evil-define-key* (and the new define-key!
macro), so use that when we can.
This also means changes to either API won't affect Doom's modules in the
long term.
Now that doom//byte-compile and doom//reload-autoloads always run in an
isolated Emacs session, there is little need to ensure idempotency of
the current session's state.
+ enable lexical-scope everywhere (lexical-binding = t): ~5-10% faster
startup; ~5-20% general boost
+ reduce consing, function calls & garbage collection by preferring
cl-loop & dolist over lambda closures (for mapc[ar], add-hook, and
various cl-lib filter/map/reduce functions) -- where possible
+ prefer functions with dedicated opcodes, like assq (see byte-defop's
in bytecomp.el for more)
+ prefer pcase & cond (faster) over cl-case
+ general refactor for code readability
+ ensure naming & style conventions are adhered to
+ appease byte-compiler by marking unused variables with underscore
+ defer minor mode activation to after-init, emacs-startup or
window-setup hooks; a customization opportunity for users + ensures
custom functionality won't interfere with startup.