The ob-C.el library takes care of C, C++ and D. This modifies the babel
lazy-loader to take this into account. Name => library mappings are
defined in +org-babel-mode-alist.
Removes +org-babel-languages and no longer eagerly loads babel
libraries. If an ob-*.el exists for the language, it will be loaded once
you execute its src block.
Warning: this may interfere with tangling. An unloaded library can't
register a language extension in org-babel-tangle-lang-exts (if any).
This means babel won't be able to figure out the correct file extension
for certain src blocks.
Either load the package explicitly or provide a filename + extension for
the TARGET-FILE argument:
(require 'ob-rust)
(org-babel-tangle-file "notes.org")
;; or
(org-babel-tangle-file "notes.org" "notes.rs")
Originally, I built the load-path with site-lisp paths first, then
packages. There was a modest ~10% startup boost doing this, because
there were considerably more site packages loaded at startup than
plugins.
However, this meant built-in packages would get precedence over plugins,
which is undesirable. In org's case, I simply modified the load-path
in lang/org/init.el. However, this issue has cropped up again in #340.
Evidently, that 10% boost may not be worth the risk it imposes, so I've
rearranged the load-path with packages first.
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.
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.
Latex language module with previews, latexmk, reftex, bibtex and others.
Completion with company mode.
Selection of bibliography using Ivy or Helm.
Later preview panel or okular as viewers.
LatexMk for compiling code.
Prettified indentation with adaptive-wrap along with good indentation of environments.
Additional fontification of common commands.
Previously, Doom would forget lang/org's modification of the load-path
if you call doom//reload-load-path (which is called when you do package
management with an open Emacs session).
No more!
This is a breaking change! Update your :popup settings. Old ones will
throw errors!
Doom's new popup management system casts off its shackles (hur hur) and
replaces them with the monster that is `display-buffer-alist`, and
window parameters.
However, this is highly experimental! Expect edge cases. Particularly
with org-mode and magit (or anything that does its own window
management).
Relevant to #261, #263, #325
During runtime, the new version of org (installed via ELPA) is added to
load-path, but this doesn't happen during compile-time. Wrap it in
eval-and-compile and that changes.
Now that the org ELPA archive has https support, we can add it to
package-archives. This fixes some 'org is unavailable' errors when
installing org packages that have declared earlier versions of org as
a dependency.
This also makes installing a newer version of org-mode much simpler.
Woo!
Caused because AucTex's LaTeX-mode reports its major-mode as
'latex-mode. A check in :company-backends expects major modes to have
matching hooks (e.g. LaTeX-mode-hook => LaTeX-mode).
The warning confusingly states that `ghc-mode` couldn't be found, implying it's some kind of emacs mode. However, the predicate is actually checking for the `ghc-mod` executable, which is something entirely different.