Also consolidates all REPLs (opened through the :tools eval module)
under one popup rule, which inhibits ESC from prematurely closing
them (#1944), and cleans up after their buffers *only* if their handlers
weren't specified to :persist, e.g.
(set-repl-handler! 'some-mode #'some-repl-handler :persist t)
Also standardized ESS's REPL commands.
These instructions were tested on openSUSE Tumbleweed and openSUSE Leap
15.1. There are some modules left that are not documented yet, but this
already improves the sitution for common openSUSE users.
This update may potentially break your usage of add-hook! if you pass
the :local or :append properties to it. This is how they used to work:
(add-hook! :append 'some-mode-hook #'do-something)
Thsoe properties must now follow the hooks, e.g.
(add-hook! 'some-mode-hook :append #'do-something)
Other changes:
- Various add-hook calls have been renamed to add-hook! because I
incorrectly assumed `defun` always returned its definition's symbol,
when in fact, its return value is "undefined" (so sayeth the
documentation). This should fix#1597.
- This update adds the ability to add multiple functions to hooks
without a list:
(add-hook! 'some-mode-hook
#'do-something
#'do-something-else)
- The indentation logic has been changed so that consecutive function
symbols at indented at the same level as the first argument, but forms
are indent like a defun.
(add-hook! 'some-mode-hook
#'do-something
#'do-something-else)
(add-hook! 'some-mode-hook
(message "Hello"))
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.
Dante quietly saves the current buffer (without triggering save hooks)
before invoking flycheck, unexpectedly leaving the buffer in an
unmodified state.
This is annoying if we depend on save hooks to do work on the
buffer (like reformatting), so we restore a (false) modified state.
- SPC o r now prompts for a REPL to open when none was found for the
current buffer.
- REPL handlers must now follow the naming convention "*/open*-repl".
e.g. +python/open-ipython-repl, +emacs-lisp/open-repl, etc.
- +eval/open-repl has been split in two:
- +eval/open-repl-other-window
- +eval/open-repl-same-window
subword-mode is enabled by default for no other language, nor is it the
default behavior in vim (and it affects evil word motions), so it should
be opt-in.
Mentioned in #1083
Uses a less destructive method (the same that Spacemacs uses) than the
one introduced in 13cee68, by introducing MODE-local-vars-hook hooks,
which run after local vars have been initialized.
The old method was to call `hack-local-variables` *before* mode hooks
run, however, this causes variables set by modes to have higher
precedence than local vars, which is unacceptable.
Also moved intero-mode & dante-mode to haskell-mode-local-vars-hook
Conform to conventions, use `add-hook!` for multiple hooks, use single semi-colon for eol comments, remove comments redundant with code, and use sharp-quote to indicate function symbol.