C-S-s while company is completing shoudl bring up the results in your
completion framework of choice (ivy, helm, vertico, etc), but failed to
do so for vertico (for any completion backend besides company-capf
perhaps).
Some time ago I noticed the cooperative lock file management wasn't
working as I remember. I forget what exactly I was thinking, but
basically I've poked at the code until it seems to work better.
In 4d9ea6853b I reacted to a either a change that I presume occurred
in org-msg at some point, or behaviour originally unnoticed, that led to
bulk-selected files being attached in reverse. Further investigation has
indicated that this isn't actually making attachment order work as
expected, just hiding the reverse behaviour from bulk-attachment. The
better approach is to keep the dired mark reversal, and change
org-msg-attach-attach to add new files to the end, not the start, of the
list of attachments.
There are two changes to the default optional read-file-name arguments
that should be made for the purpose of attaching files:
1. The optional MUSTMATCH argument should be set, as one can't exactly
attach non-existent files.
2. The INITIAL argument should be set to the empty string so that if
default-directory is customised for some reason or another that
selecting it leads to the expected directory being selected.
Without INITIAL or DEFAULT-FILENAME being specified, the current file
path will be used, which is never desirable as this is simply a path
to the message buffer.
Replace the rather crude "don't do anything if already in a mu4e-y
buffer" behaviour with a more refined approach that tries to find the
live mu4e buffer likely of the most interest and switch to that, before
calling (mu4e) if no such buffer is found.
Occurs during non-interactive startup of the user's config (e.g. 'doom
doctor'), while :ui (modeline +light) is enabled.
This is a makeshift solution until I get around to finishing the +light
feature.
Where f9201eb introduced a general context system, this one introduces
one for modules, to simplify our let-bind game when interacting with
modules, and to more efficiently expose module state to modulep! (which
gets called at runtime a great deal, so its performance is important).
* lisp/doom-lib.el (doom-log): simplify macro and introduce
doom-inhibit-log variable.
* lisp/doom-modules.el (modulep!): fix reported file path if modulep!
fails to find the local module.
* lisp/lib/debug.el (doom-debug-variables): disable doom-inhibit-log
when debug mode is on.
Ref: f9201eb218
Introduces a system to announce what execution contexts are active, so I
can react appropriately, emit more helpful logs/warnings in the case of
issues, and throw more meaningful errors.
* bin/doom: load module CLIs in the 'modules' context.
* lisp/cli/doctor.el: load package files in 'packages' context.
* lisp/doom-cli.el:
- (doom-before-init-hook, doom-after-init-hook): trigger hooks at the
correct time. This may increase startup load time, as the benchmark
now times more of the startup process.
- (doom-cli-execute, doom-cli-context-execute,
doom-cli-context-restore, doom-cli-context-parse,
doom-cli--output-benchmark-h, doom-cli-call, doom-cli--restart,
doom-cli-load, run!): remove redundant context prefix in debug logs,
it's now redundant with doom-context, which doom-log now prefixes
them with.
* lisp/doom-lib.el (doom-log): prefix doom-context to doom-log output,
unless it starts with :.
* lisp/doom-packages.el (package!, doom-packages--read): throw error if
not used in a packages.el file or in the context of our package
manager.
* lisp/doom-profiles.el (doom-profile--generate-init-vars,
doom-profile--generate-load-modules): use modules doom-context instead
of doom-init-time to detect startup.
* lisp/doom-start.el (doom-load-packages-incrementally-h): move function
closer to end of doom-after-init-hook.
* lisp/doom.el:
- (doom-before-init-hook, doom--set-initial-values-h,
doom--begin-init-h): rename doom--set-initial-values-h to
doom--begin-init-h and ensure it runs as late in
doom-before-init-hook as possible, as that is the point where Doom's
"initialization" formally begins.
- (doom-after-init-hook): don't trigger at the end of command-line-1
in non-interactive sessions. This will be triggered manually in
doom-cli.el's run!.
* lisp/lib/config.el (doom/reload, doom/reload-autoloads,
doom/reload-env): use 'reload' context for reload commands.
* modules/lang/emacs-lisp/autoload.el (+emacs-lisp-eval): use 'eval'
context.
* modules/lang/org/config.el: remove doom-reloading-p; check for
'reload' doom context instead.
* lisp/doom-cli.el:
- reference backport source commit.
- doom-cli--restart: a type check is all we need here. This is a
programmer error, not a user error.
* lisp/doom-editor.el (recentf): mention recentf-show-abbreviated (added in
emacs-mirror/emacs@32906819ad)
* lisp/doom-keybinds.el (doom-init-leader-keys-h): move to
doom-after-init-hook, in case the user customizes leader variables in
a previous hook (like emacs-startup-hook or after-init-hook).
* lisp/doom-start.el: use eval-when! to compile out the section on
non-macOS systems (when Doom gets around to compiling its core files,
later).
* modules/config/literate/autoload.el (+literate-config-file): use
file-name-concat instead of string concat. This relaxes the
requirement that doom-user-dir end in a /; a requirement I intend to
fully phase out.
* modules/lang/emacs-lisp/autoload.el (+emacs-lisp-non-package): remove
empty map! macro in flycheck-emacs-lisp-check-form. The macro already
no-ops at compile-time/in noninteractive sessions since b480ed51a3.
* modules/ui/hl-todo/config.el (hl-todo-keyword-faces): revise
commentary for default hl-todo keywords.
Ref: emacs-mirror/emacs@32906819ad
Ref: b480ed51a3
- Adds doom-module-packages-file and doom-module-metadata-file.
- Uses them and the other doom-module-*-file variables where they were
previously hardcoded.
- Add .el extension to doom-module-{init,config}-file; it is now the
consumer's responsibility to strip/change/keep the extension as they
see fit.
I intend to phase out the internal usage of use-package in Doom's core
and modules. The macro is too complex and magical for our needs.
That said, until we've fully removed it, this :config use-package is
hardcoded to be enabled-by-default, until use-package has been
refactored out of core and modules. It'd be wise not to add it to your
doom! blocks yet.
When the *IRC* workspace is already populated by circe buffers, there is
no reason to emit an error, just switch to the *IRC* workspace and do
nothing.
+mu4e-lock-available seems like a potential entry-point to the mu-lock
functionality, e.g. on startup check if another Emacs process has mu4e
active, and so it might as well be turned into an autoload.
Originally this was added to have the order of attached files match the
order of mark selection. Recent usage indicates that this was either
misguided or the behaviour has changed, as this now achieves the opposite
effect --- with nreverse files are attached in reverse order. Removing
nreverse provides the expected behaviour.
It's a bit silly to just unconditionally widen the current frame when
you could have the mu4e headers view in another frame entirely. Instead
we can look for the mu4e headers buffer, and only widen frames where it
is the active buffer.
When using evil +everywhere, we disable the default forge bindings.
We must then explicitly remap magit-browse-thing, as it's just a
placeholder command (bound in multiple places).
While this is a hidden buffer, it's raised when an error occurs. In such
situations, it can be a little confusing to see the result of every
tangle to date instead of just the last tangle. It's easy enough to
simple clear the buffer at the start of the tangle process.
consult--grep-lookahead-p throws an error if argv[0] can't be found, and
so will require if consult isn't installed (which would be redundant
with the package checks the doctor already does). To prevent misleading
backtraces here, I've suppressed the latter issue, but the former will
need attention later.
Doom replaces `org-insert-heading`, but its replacement does not respect
`org-insert-heading-hook`. This commit fixes that, enabling folks to
customize their insert-heading behavior, e.g. adding a time stamp:
(defun my/org-set-creation-date-heading-property ()
(save-excursion
(org-back-to-heading)
(org-set-property "CREATED" (format-time-string "[%Y-%m-%d %T]"))))
(add-hook 'org-insert-heading-hook #'my/org-set-creation-date-heading-property)
Ref: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs/org-mode.git/tree/lisp/org.el#n6187
Ref: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs/org-mode.git/tree/lisp/org.el#n1615