Guessing the indentation can be awfully slow because it scans the whole
buffer. This PR overrides the guessing mechanism to scan at most 10000
points.
Signed-off-by: Rudi Grinberg <me@rgrinberg.com>
We generate an org-version.el file, rendering our old org-release hacks
unnecessary. This may cause breakages for uses who do deep clones of
org-plus-contrib; needs testing.
- No longer translates :fetcher to :host. Update your package!
declaration people!
- Now evaluates the values for properties (except for :recipe IF it is a
list whose CAR passes keywordp -- for backwards compatibility).
- Throws error if an invalid property is used for a package!'s :recipe
We're focusing on ripgrep so we can iterate on search functionality in
Doom quicker. There is nothing the other search backends can do that
ripgrep can't. It is now a hard dependency for Doom.
-f is necessary when there are changes to your system that Doom needs to
pick up when running 'doom refresh'. It won't do anything if your doom
dotfiles haven't visibly changed, which won't be the case if you are
installing, say, mu4e or vterm, through your system package manager.
What was initially a time-saving mechanic has become a trap for
beginners, so I've made -f its default behavior and its previous
behavior opt-in with the -n / --if-necessary switches.
/ is harder to reach than s, more so on certain keyboard layouts, so
'SPC /' has been moved to 'SPC s'. Similar has been done to other / and
. leader keybinds. Whats more, 'SPC s' for snippets is seldomly used and
available through other means, so it was removed.
Summary:
- 'SPC /' moved to 'SPC s'
- 'SPC f .' and 'SPC f /' moved to 'SPC f f' and 'SPC f F', respectively
- 'SPC p /' removed (already on 'SPC p f')
- 'SPC p ?' moved to 'SPC p F' (doom/find-file-in-other-projects)
- 'SPC n /' moved to 'SPC n s' (+default/org-notes-search)
- 'SPC n .' removed (already on 'SPC n N')
- Remove 'SPC s' prefix for snippets. Was seldomly used and most of its
commands are available on other keys or through `M-x`, which is
enough.
This can be used to extract paths from evil-ex style paths. e.g. the
following inserts the stdout into the current buffer (assuming we're in
~/some/project/filename.c):
:R!echo %:P ~/some/project
:R!echo %:t filename.c
:R!echo %:e c
:R!echo %:r filename
:R!echo ~/another/project/%:t:r.h
~/another/project/filename.h
:R % contents of current file
http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/cmdline.html#filename-modifiers
has a full list of vim filename modifiers. Doom doesn't support all of
them, but it does support most of them.