No extra configuration is required to lazy load these two plugins (they autoload themselves). These blocks would force them to load at startup otherwise.
ws-butler only strips trailing spaces on lines that have been modified.
+ ws-butler is disabled if editorconfig enables
trim_trailing_whitespace, which resorts to delete-trailing-whitespace
instead.
+ Updates doom|(enable|disable)-delete-trailing-whitespace hooks to use
ws-butler-mode.
Full column is a bit tempermental. This also removes the need to restore
the window config after quitting magit.
Why the switch from full-frame magit to current-buffer? It is the least
intrusive policy; it doesn't rearrange the user's workspace.
The old policy was to invoke magit in fullscreen, but in practice, I've
found myself wanting to peek at other buffers (maybe even notes) while I
manage my project in version control.
So this change introduces two big changes and one fix:
+ Instead of a full-frame policy, we use full-column. e.g. Invoking
magit-status will take up a full column of windows (and will restore
them when you quit).
+ Popups are displayed below the current window if called from a magit
buffer, otherwise as a popup at the bottom of the frame.
+ Fixes popups opening in a random window if called from a magit buffer
in a popup.
This is only a start and needs more testing.
Loading magit-blame immediately after git-timemachine is premature, only
one command uses magit-blame (git-timemachine-blame), so we defer it
until that command is called (also, it makes more sense to be in the
emacs/vc module, than tools/magit).
+ Removes redundant/unhelpful comments
+ Renames functions, hooks and variables to be self-documenting
+ Use add-to-list to ensure idempotency (and is more performant)
Because we already use global-auto-revert-mode, but because it's lazy
loaded, the magit-autorevert package may not notice, and will enable
magit-auto-revert-mode anyway.
+ doom-before-switch-buffer-hook => doom-exit-buffer-hook
+ doom-before-switch-window-hook => doom-exit-window-hook
+ doom-after-switch-buffer-hook => doom-enter-buffer-hook
+ doom-after-switch-window-hook => doom-enter-window-hook
Shorter, easier-to-type names that better describe their intended
purpose.
The old names are still usable, but deprecated.
Phasing out the +module@name convention for plain old
+module-name-hydra, which is more compatible with elisp reflection tools
like describe-function and such.
Also, Emacs starts up faster now. Tee hee.
Because the api-key was saved to the elisp cache without quotes, the key
was read like a variable symbol. This is why we can't have nice things.
Reported by @freddian
+ +wakatime/setup prompts for API key, after asking if you want to open a
browser to the wakatime api-key page.
+ wakatime-api-key is saved to a cache file in doom-cache-dir.
+ Fixed wakatime not starting on the first buffer when passing a file to
Emacs directly.
Suggested by @freddian
After some profiling, it turns out map-put and map-delete are 5-7x
slower (more on Emacs 25) than delq, setf/alist-get and add-to-list for
small lists (under 250 items), which is exactly how I've been using
them.
The only caveat is alist-get's signature is different on Emacs 25, thus
a polyfill is necessary in core-lib.
Now accepts a flat plist of all its former parameters, including new
:parameters and :actions properties to increase your control over the
fate of your windows.
The old usage of set-popup-rule! is deprecated and may not work right!
The :ui popup module has also seen a major refactor to improve
efficiency and load times.
Sorry! This is the last "big" change before 2.1!