This commit updates the smart tab functionality so that:
1. The only functionality checked is for the modules that are enabled.
2. The priority of the TAB behavior is tunable by the user.
This also updates the TAB behavior for the Corfu module to be
`indent-for-tab-command` instead of `completion-at-point` so that users
can use the TAB key to indent their code and navigating Org tables.
We also address #7372 by checking overriding-terminal-local-map, as that
is used by Embark.
At 0.1, Corfu pops up too aggressively and too often, even for fast
typists. This is especially disruptive with slow backends that might
block Emacs. I think 0.18-0.24 is the goldilocks zone, so I'll start
with 0.18, and maybe increase it later.
It seems the temporary branch that 'doom upgrade' creates is sometimes
left over after a 'doom upgrade', preventing the next 'git fetch' from
completing.
Ref: #7771
Caused by a regression originally introduced in b6b755d, but incorrectly
fixed in 89c56a3. Don't code while sleep deprived, kids.
Amend: 89c56a3393
Amend: b6b755dea4
12a765c introduced suppression of package-rebuilding prompts on 'doom
upgrade', but inadvertently reversed the check. This fixes that (and
refactors the if/or tree into a `cond`).
Amend: 12a765c509
Prior to this, -B would suppress the prompt for package rebuilding if
your Emacs version or hostname changed. Now, it fully inhibits
rebuilding in either case.
Fix: #7760
Ref: cff091982e
This removes the truncation of `package!` `:pin`s. This was originally
intended to make packages.el files easier to skim, but in hindsight it
didn't really. It served little other purpose but to make it harder for
folks to interact with the :pin string.
Due to upstream changes in ivy-rich, +workspace/switch-to throws a
`wrong-type-argument listp leaf` error. As I plan to phase out Ivy
support (and the Ivy module) in the long term, I'll simply remove
ivy (and ivy-rich) integration in the workspaces module, rather than
update it.
Fix: #7499Fix: #7173
'doom purge' is now deprecated.
Also changes 'doom sync's -p option to --gc. Since GCing causes the loss
of historical data, I'd rather it be a long option to make it a little
harder to do accidentally.
This changes 'doom sync' to be smarter about responding to changed
package recipes/pins, changes in Emacs version, or instances where the user
has copied a config to a new system.
In all these cases, the user would formerly have to know about a
specific combination of 'doom sync -u' and 'doom build' to ensure Doom
is in a good state. With this change, 'doom sync' handles all these
cases.
Also, 'doom build' is now deprecated (and 'doom sync' now has a
--rebuild option to mimic its old behavior).
Also also, sometimes, a package may silently fail when cloned (which
used to result in an empty repo). Now, if this is detected, cloning will
be re-attempted up to 3 times before aborting with much more visible
error.
Note: these are stopgap solutions, until v3 is finished.
Something often reported are file-missing errors when a package that
should be present isn't. This can easily happen if, say, during a 'doom
sync' or 'doom upgrade' a package fails to clone correctly and the user
misses the errors, then tries to carry on as normal. What's worse is
that Straight leaves behind an empty directory, which it treats as a
sign that the package has been cloned correctly, so it doesn't raise any
fuss over them.
With this change, 'doom sync' (and 'doom upgrade') will now try again,
if the clone process fails the first time (up to 3 times) before
aborting the whole process altogether, which should be loud enough for
users not to miss. Note that these failures at 99.99% because of
network (or upstream downtime) issues.
For now, this does leave Doom in an incomplete state (until you try
again when the connection issue is resolved), but a rollback step will
be added in v3 to prevent this, as well as better error messages (as
well as @doomelpa mirror for packages on less reliable hosts, like
codeberg, savannah, etc).
BREAKING CHANGE: This removes the 'doom compile' and 'doom clean'
commands, and offers no immediate replacement for them (and no plan to
include one). In the future, byte-compilation of Doom's internals will
be baked into 'doom sync', but until then, Doom is not optimized to take
advantage of byte-compilation, and forcing it provides no benefit.
This is the only internal usage of :bind, which I want to avoid, because
it pulls in bind-key, which offers no real benefit over just about any
other key binding function or macro, so I'd rather use what is already
available (like map!).
This commit updates the smart tab functionality so that:
1. The only functionality checked is for the modules that are enabled.
2. The priority of the TAB behavior is tunable by the user.
This also updates the TAB behavior for the Corfu module to be
`indent-for-tab-command` instead of `completion-at-point` so that users
can use the TAB key to indent their code and navigating Org tables.
We also address #7372 by checking overriding-terminal-local-map, as that
is used by Embark.
This commit updates the smart tab functionality so that:
1. The only functionality checked is for the modules that are enabled.
2. The priority of the TAB behavior is tunable by the user.
This also updates the TAB behavior for the Corfu module to be
`indent-for-tab-command` instead of `completion-at-point` so that users
can use the TAB key to indent their code and navigating Org tables.
We also address #7372 by checking overriding-terminal-local-map, as that
is used by Embark.