Brings better default code folding support to various languages, like
yaml, ruby, matlab, haml and vimrc. Hideshow is still quite
unsophisticated and will need the help of another package for complete
code folding functionality. Perhaps origami or vimish fold.
The code-folding functional in the feature/evil module will soon be
replaced by that.
I've been keeping my init up-to-date with the example, but the example
still has `electric-indent` whereas `make` warns me it's been renamed to
`electric`. This provides the correct module name in the example.
It will tangle and byte-compile a config.org in your private config.
Doom will then load the resulting config.elc later.
Org is only loaded when updating this file.
Must be enabled on a per-project basis. You can change this behavior by
setting +magit-hub-enabled-by-default to non-nil (before magit is
loaded).
Magithub has been made opt-in because:
1. Magithub is imposing, asking the user for a token, especially for
users who don't use github (much or at all), but may occasionally
have a project with a github remote.
2. magithub is really slow on first load for medium-to-large repos.
3. It's really easy to enable it through the magithub popup (H C e).
magithub.enabled is saved into the project's .git/config file, so the
setting will persist.
Also added a docstring to +magit-hub-features
This commit adds bin/doom, which acts as the middle man that make once
was (and will stay for a while, though the documentation will shift away
from using it). It does everything the previous make interface did, but
is faster and more flexible. bin/doom should eventually replace the
makefile.
bin/doom also makes it easier to run Doom outside of ~/.emacs.d and
~/.doom.d with, for example:
bin/doom run -p ~/.other.doom.d/ -e ~/.other.emacs.d
bin/doom.cmd is included for Windows users, but I don't recommend using
it yet. It hasn't been tested nor have I ever written a batch script
before.
Also update init.example.el with new defaults.