: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.
- Highlights remote/tramp files with ivy-remote face
- Highlights non-file-visiting buffers with ivy-subdir face
- Highlight modified buffers with ivy-modified-buffer face
- Disable built-in ivy-switch-buffer transformer (redundant with our own
transformer)
- Mode icons will now fall back to fundamental-mode icon, rather than
the blank file icon (whose irregular width ruins ivy's formatting)
- Fixes project-based buffer name highlighting in switch-to-buffer
- Fixes a void-variable ivy-rich--ivy-switch-buffer-transformer error
Relevant to #1159
Let-binding `ivy-use-virtual-buffers` is neater and more robust than the
previous solution using some copy-pasta. Calling the unwind routine
will become important once counsel is patched to restore buffer-list.
When `+ivy-buffer-preview` is non-nil, our various switch-buffer
functions will preview the current candidate buffer, like how
`counsel-switch-buffer` works.
When `ivy-use-virtual-buffers` is non-nil, virtual buffers are *not*
previewed unless `+ivy-buffer-preview` is `'everything`.
Allow current buffer to be selected when switching other window, so you
can quickly get a second window to the current buffer.
Preselect the most recently selected buffer, so repeated C-x b RET will
switch between your two most recent buffers.
Cause by the expectation that doom-project-root would never return
nil (which was changed to return nil if not in a valid project, due to
an update upstream, in projectile).
projectile-project-root no longer returns `default-directory` if not in
a project (it returns nil). As such, doom-project-* functions (and their
uses) have been refactored.
+ doom-project-p & doom-project-root are aliases for
projectile-project-p & projectile-project-root.
+ doom-project-{p,root,name,expand} now has a DIR argument (for
consistency, since projectile-project-name and
projectile-project-expand do not).
+ The nocache parameter is no longer necessary, as projectile's caching
behavior is now more sane.
+ Removed some projectile advice/hacks that are no longer necessary.
+ Updated unit tests
Color let-functions no longer take format string arguments. e.g.
(format! (red "Hello %s" "world"))
Becomes
(format! (red "Hello %s") "world")
The same goes for print!. Also, doom-ansi-apply now takes two arguments
instead of three.
Also merges doom-message-{fg,bg,fx} into doom-ansi-alist, and reduces
backtrace noise when errors originate from inside these macros.
The same as 7d617f15, but for ivy:
+ Heavily refactored +ivy-file-search
+ Removed -z flag from all engines by default
+ Changed the behavior of the universal argument for from-cwd
interactive commands (e.g. +ivy/rg-from-cwd). It used to enable
recursive searches, but now enables inclusion of hidden and compressed
files in the search instead. *-from-cwd searches are always recursive
now.
+ Now generates +ivy/X and +ivy/X-from-cwd commands dynamically.
+ Split +ivy/project-search into +ivy/project-search-from-cwd.
Universal arguments are passed from these commands to their delegated
engine command.
counsel-projectile-find-file has other capabilities (like actions and
sorting). So we conditionally use projectile-find-file only if the
project is large enough to warrant it.
This occurs when invoking it from the root of massive file trees, like
$HOME or certain non-project folders. It's better that it defer to a
different command altogether (counsel-find-file) if invoked from $HOME,
and counsel-file-jump from anywhere else, which offers approximately
what we want, but at a fraction of the performance cost in those cases.
This allows you to control what search engines for project-search
commands (bound to SPC / p) to try, and in what order. If you didn't
want to use ripgrep, for instance, remove 'rg from these variables, or
move it to the end of the list.
Fixes wrong-number-of-args error caused by new counsel-more-chars
implementation upstream.
These hacks removed the hard-coded minimum input length requirement for
counsel-ag and its ilk. The recent counsel update made those
requirements customizable through counsel-more-chars-alist.
Phasing out the +module@name convention for plain old
+module-name-hydra, which is more compatible with elisp reflection tools
like describe-function and such.
Also, Emacs starts up faster now. Tee hee.