Sets out to solve a number of issues with the package management
process. Namely:
- To-be-removed packages that are simply being removed are no longer
incorrectly labeled "quelpa->elpa", but "removed" instead.
- A backend (elpa vs quelpa) column was added to the package listing
confirmation when running `doom update`.
- Doom now correctly recognizes that packages installed with a psuedonym
are installed, and will not endlessly attempt to uninstall and
reinstall them on every `doom refresh`.
- Packages declared with :built-in will no longer lose their built-in
marking if said package is not actually present in Emacs' site load
paths. i.e. if you say it's built in, Doom won't question it.
- package!'s :ignore property is now treated as a form whose evaluated
result will be used as its value.
- 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)
For non-evil users:
<leader> x doom/open-scratch-buffer
<leader> X doom/switch-to-scratch-buffer
<leader> p s doom/open-project-scratch-buffer
<leader> p S doom/switch-to-project-scratch-buffer
For evil users:
<leader> x doom/open-scratch-buffer
<leader> b s doom/open-scratch-buffer
<leader> b S doom/switch-to-scratch-buffer
<leader> p s doom/open-project-scratch-buffer
<leader> p S doom/switch-to-project-scratch-buffer
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.
Adds the following keybinds:
SPC n . Browses org-directory
SPC n / Text search in org-directory
SPC n * Text search in org-directory with symbol at point
SPC n h Jump to org headline in org-agenda-files
I've replaced load-env-var with our own custom parser. load-env-var
expects a well-formatted env file, which neither env nor set produces,
which is what doom env uses to dump the shell environment.
This should fix issues that arise when envvars (like PATH) contain
arbitrary whitespace.