- Fixes#1506: unsets uniquify-buffer-name-style to work around breakage
in persp-mode having to do with buffers being retrospectively renamed.
See Bad-ptr/persp-mode.el#104.
- Move creation of main workspace into persp-mode-hook, to ensure main
workspace always exists and nil workspace is never active.
- Remove +workspaces|init-frame and significantly reduce LOC in
+workspaces|init to the bare essentials. This _may_ break persp-mode
in daemon Emacs, but I'll deal with that next.
We stop relying on the built-in mechanism for auto-registering a buffer
to the current workspace, because it misses many buffers (e.g. when we
switch buffers with SPC b b). Instead, we add buffers when they are
interactively switched to.
Due to a load order issue, the doom-local-dir regexp wouldn't be mapped
through our custom recentf-filename-handlers. `file-in-directory-p` is
more robust.
It was formerly escaped because of general bugginess, particularly when
bind -v was used in zsh. It's still too buggy to enable in vterm-mode,
however.
org-capture, when used on a target that doesn't exist, will invisibly
expand a file template, leaving a hang yasnippet active. After
org-capture initializes, the yasnippet will attempt to operate on
overlays that don't exist, throwing overlayp errors.
CDing into the project root can be accomplished with external tools, e.g.
cd $(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)
cd $(hg root)
cd $(npm root)
Any of which could be aliased. Also, +vterm/toggle and term/toggle
define the PROOT environment variable, so `cd $PROOT` will work too.
On the other hand, CDing to the current file/folder requires that the
shell be made aware of the file/directory of some Emacs state, which is
a little trickier to deal with, so I made that the default behavior for
+term/toggle, +vterm/toggle and +eshell/toggle.
Uses the most basic, uncustomized shell to a) prevent interference
caused by slow shell configs and b) speed up project text searches. This
comes at the cost of isolating these programs from envvars that the user
may have set in their shell configs in order to change
ag/rg/pt/git-grep/grep's behavior.
If this bothers you, change +ivy-file-search-shell to your shell (or
to the value of `shell-file-name`).
Possibly relevant to an issue mentioned in #1260
They are:
]m, [m
Jump to next/previous beginning of method/function.
]M, [M
Jump to next/previous end of method/function
]#, [#
Jump to next/previous preprocessor directive (only supports C-style
directives for now)
]*, [* (or ]\, [\)
Jump to next/previous comment
- Move subr-x/cl-lib loading to core-lib
- Revise docstrings for and rename various CLI functions to be more
descriptive and up-to-date
- After regenerating autoloads file, bin/doom will try to reload
autoloads files remotely, through the server/daemon, if possible. This
is highly experimental and could break
The fix for #1489 (in 13f5a762) gives the temp buffer (where formatting
is performed) a real buffer-file-name, which causes it to prompt to save
it when it is killed.
Adds these keys, inspired by tpope/vim-unimpaired:
[ SPC, ] SPC (or [o, ]o)
Add COUNT blank lines above/below the cursor
[f, ]f
Visit previous/next file in current folder, alphabetically
[u, ]u
Url encode/decode operators
[y, ]y
C-string-style escaping/unescaping operators (escapes quotes,
backslashes and control characters)
[x, ]x
XML entity encoding/decoding operators (only if :lang web is enabled)
[F, ]F
Focus previous/next frame (decided this is better than ]t/[t which is
being used by hl-todo-{next,previous})
We already had gp and ]b/[b (buffers).
We're not going to port ]e/[e because it is redundant with ddp/ddP or gx
(evil-exchange). I also think these keybinds are better suited to
{next,previous}-error.