This lets you delay a body of code until an arbitrary condition is
met (which is checked whenever a file is loaded).
Also refactors set-file-template! to wait until +file-templates-alist is
defined.
+ :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).
Alexander-Miller/treemacs#212 introduced treemacs-persist-file, which we
now use instead of tools/treemacs' old treemacs-persistence hack (which
didn't work).
Relevant to #669
If you open emacs with a file (emacs file.txt), the file is switched to
before the switch-buffer hooks are set up. However, many core packages
are hooked to those switch-buffer hooks (to load when they're first
triggered). They miss the boat and don't get loaded.
These packages are now hooked onto after-find-file as well (and
immediately), which will fire when a file is opened, before or after
initialization.
Fixes#680
I have hunted this bug on and off for nearly a year now. It would kill
processes randomly, move the point suddenly, and quit the active
minibuffer without warning.
The only clue it'd leave behind is an announcement in the minibuffer:
"Already at top-level".
Thanks to @UndeadKernel for the last piece of the puzzle!
Fixes#436
Occurs when :lang ruby is enabled, because the rspec-mode package
autoloads an advice, but not the advice function. Still, it seems silly
to do this advice before the package is loaded, so we disable it.
Making the compile check happen earlier fixes an edge case where the
resulting files from a literate config being tangled into multiple files
aren't recognized by Doom's package management or autoload generation
systems.
Disabling byte-compiling fixes an all too common issue where packages
and macros are undefined at compile time, causing a plethora of invalid
function errors.
Leave byte-compilation to `bin/doom compile`!