Fixes an issue where dtrt-indent and/or nav-flash would hang Emacs when
opening large files, and disables all mode hooks for large
files (without using fundamental-mode so you can at least get syntax
highlighting).
Describes why we try to compress undo-tree history data. I'm aware that
undo-tree-auto-save-history is disabled, but that may change in the near
future.
Increase `undo-limit`, `undo-strong-limit` and `undo-outer-limit` by a
factor of ten, which should prevent emacs from prematurely truncating
the undo history and corrupting the tree.
Restore `undo-tree-auto-save-history` which was disabled to avoid
exacerbating the undo history truncation.
Change the `undo-tree` recipe to grab the latest version from the
maintainer's repostiory instead of the outdated ELPA version.
Restore `undo-tree-enable-undo-in-region` which should be fixed in the
latest version of `undo-tree`.
This isn't vital enough a package to be included in core. Emacs already
provides view-lossage, and there are other, better packages for
displaying your keybinds as you type.
Even one that I've been working on (with special evil support):
https://github.com/hlissner/doom-emacs-private/blob/master/lisp/keycast.el
This commit does two things:
- Renames def-advice! to defadvice!, in the spirit of naming convenience
macros after the function/macro they enhance or replace.
- Correct the names of advice functions to indicate visibility and
intent. A public advice function like doom-set-jump-a is meant to be
used elsewhere. A private one like +dired--cleanup-header-line-a
shouldn't -- it likely won't work anywhere but the function(s) it was
made to advise.
Calling this pivotal macro "def-package!" has frequently been a source
of confusion. It is a thin wrapper around use-package, and it should be
obvious that it is so. For this reason, and to match the naming
convention used with other convenience macros/wrappers, it is now
use-package!.
Also changes def-package-hook! -> use-package-hook!
The old macros are now marked obsolete and will be removed when straight
integration is merged.
- Remove core-os and move many of its settings out to other core
libraries, where they belong
- Significantly improve commenting & compartmentalization of many
settings
- Correct some mis-named public hooks (that were named as if they were
private)
- Move the vast majority of optimizations to "Optimizations" section in
core.el
- Don't activate xclip-mode or osx-clipboard-mode if we're accessing
Emacs through an SSH connection (does more bad than good there)
- Add fast-but-imprecise-scrolling = t
- Set bidi-display-reordering = 'left-to-right, at the recommendation of
an Emacs dev. Apparently setting it to nil is undefined, as Emacs is
designed to always assume it's set; setting it explicitly to
left-to-right will still do what was originally intended by turning it
off: to reduce line/text scans for bidirectional text, which gives us
a moderate boost in general runtime snappiness
- Set inhibit-compacting-fon-caches = t on windows (where it struggles
especially with icon fonts)
- Disables "literal" mode for very large files (because I will be
backporting so-long.el from Emacs 27 in the next commit)
This is second of three big naming convention changes. In this commit,
we change the naming conventions for hook functions and variable
functions:
1. Replace the bar | to indicate a hook function with a -h suffix, e.g.
doom|init-ui -> doom-init-ui-h
doom|run-local-var-hooks -> doom-run-local-var-hooks-h
2. And add a -fn suffix for functions meant to be set on variables,
e.g.
(setq magit-display-buffer-function #'+magit-display-buffer-fn)
See ccf327f8 for the reasoning behind these changes.
This is first of three big naming convention updates that have been a
long time coming. With 2.1 on the horizon, all the breaking updates will
batched together in preparation for the long haul.
In this commit, we do away with the asterix to communicate that a
function is an advice function, and we replace it with the '-a' suffix.
e.g.
doom*shut-up -> doom-shut-up-a
doom*recenter -> doom-recenter-a
+evil*static-reindent -> +evil--static-reindent-a
The rationale behind this change is:
1. Elisp's own formatting/indenting tools would occasionally struggle
with | and * (particularly pp and cl-prettyprint). They have no
problem with / and :, fortunately.
2. External syntax highlighters (like pygmentize, discord markdown or
github markdown) struggle with it, sometimes refusing to highlight
code beyond these symbols.
3. * and | are less expressive than - and -- in communicating the
intended visibility, versatility and stability of a function.
4. It complicated the regexps we must use to search for them.
5. They were arbitrary and over-complicated to begin with, decided
on haphazardly way back when Doom was simply "my private config".
Anyhow, like how predicate functions have the -p suffix, we'll adopt the
-a suffix for advice functions, -h for hook functions and -fn for
variable functions.
Other noteable changes:
- Replaces advice-{add,remove}! macro with new def-advice!
macro. The old pair weren't as useful. The new def-advice! saves on a
lot of space.
- Removed "stage" assertions to make sure you were using the right
macros in the right place. Turned out to not be necessary, we'll
employ better checks later.
Due to a load order issue, the doom-local-dir regexp wouldn't be mapped
through our custom recentf-filename-handlers. `file-in-directory-p` is
more robust.
- Move subr-x/cl-lib loading to core-lib
- Revise docstrings for and rename various CLI functions to be more
descriptive and up-to-date
- After regenerating autoloads file, bin/doom will try to reload
autoloads files remotely, through the server/daemon, if possible. This
is highly experimental and could break
- Updates file order on window switch
- Adds dired directories to recentf list
- Reduce recentf-max-saved-items from 300 to 200 (reduce worst-case
resorting costs)
Instead of using auto-revert-mode or global-auto-revert-mode, we employ
lazy auto reverting on focus-in-hook, doom-switch-buffer-hook and
after-save-hook.
We do this because autorevert abuses inotify handles, which can grind
Emacs to a halt if you have hundreds of buffers open and something
performs expensive mtime or attribute-altering IO on their files outside
of Emacs. We only really need revert checks when we switch to or save a
buffer, or when we focus the Emacs frame.
But only if zstd is available. Also strips text properties from the undo
list. This often provides a 30-50% size benefit, with a negligible
performance impact.