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Henrik Lissner 6be2262423 Bump :lang
200ok-ch/counsel-jq@153d70b -> 200ok-ch/counsel-jq@8cadd2e
Andersbakken/rtags@63f18ac -> Andersbakken/rtags@65113e2
Groovy-Emacs-Modes/groovy-emacs-modes@26da902 -> Groovy-Emacs-Modes/groovy-emacs-modes@99eaf70
NixOS/nix-mode@0023fc5 -> NixOS/nix-mode@3cca5b6
ProofGeneral/PG@f0f0476 -> ProofGeneral/PG@bc86736
Raku/raku-mode@8a6e17f -> Raku/raku-mode@7496ad3
StanfordLegion/terra-mode@1e5e824 -> StanfordLegion/terra-mode@eab9e59
TheBB/company-reftex@291c283 -> TheBB/company-reftex@42eb98c
agda/agda@ecb9323 -> agda/agda@af9c4b9
ananthakumaran/tide@ad6fa78 -> ananthakumaran/tide@ccff099
asok/projectile-rails@f1fe6e8 -> asok/projectile-rails@6a18ada
beancount/beancount-mode@3c04745 -> beancount/beancount-mode@02fe03e
brotzeit/rustic@ed68fd3 -> brotzeit/rustic@6ca73bb
cdominik/cdlatex@adf96ba -> cdominik/cdlatex@614a8d9
clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@a14671e -> clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@3e426b3
cython/cython@9decfca -> cython/cython@fae33cf
dgutov/robe@126650a -> dgutov/robe@e1304d1
diml/utop@711c246 -> diml/utop@c87b8b2
dominikh/go-mode.el@49a5380 -> dominikh/go-mode.el@3497434
elixir-editors/emacs-elixir@0212b06 -> elixir-editors/emacs-elixir@6bbc1e5
emacs-csharp/csharp-mode@f977800 -> emacs-csharp/csharp-mode@093f0f2
emacs-ess/ESS@126d344 -> emacs-ess/ESS@4fefd0f
emacs-lsp/lsp-dart@f3b70ec -> emacs-lsp/lsp-dart@01d89d4
emacs-lsp/lsp-haskell@7efbef3 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-haskell@eb37ac4
emacs-lsp/lsp-java@9685334 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-java@b66a075
emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@51a89c1 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@9f82ebe
emacs-lsp/lsp-pyright@65fb141 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-pyright@71a7976
emacs-lsp/lsp-sourcekit@aafa987 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-sourcekit@ae4aa87
emacs-php/php-mode@a2bca9b -> emacs-php/php-mode@cbf2723
emacs-php/phpactor.el@80788a8 -> emacs-php/phpactor.el@272217f
emacs-straight/auctex@1472d1d -> emacs-straight/auctex@ea410dc
erlang/otp@94c9738 -> erlang/otp@645ea81
ethereum/emacs-solidity@b4fd719 -> ethereum/emacs-solidity@5f6ef31
factor/factor@5bfeab6 -> factor/factor@b989a86
fsharp/emacs-fsharp-mode@78898a1 -> fsharp/emacs-fsharp-mode@93b1fbc
godotengine/emacs-gdscript-mode@16c631c -> godotengine/emacs-gdscript-mode@b7bfa6a
greghendershott/racket-mode@5115c47 -> greghendershott/racket-mode@7f12cb1
haskell/haskell-mode@1baa12a -> haskell/haskell-mode@98ba392
hhvm/hack-mode@847fd91 -> hhvm/hack-mode@f9315be
hlissner/emacs-pug-mode@685fd34 -> hlissner/emacs-pug-mode@d080904
hvesalai/emacs-sbt-mode@0bdc36b -> hvesalai/emacs-sbt-mode@e29464a
idris-hackers/idris-mode@80aabd2 -> idris-hackers/idris-mode@f52ad0b
immerrr/lua-mode@2d9a468 -> immerrr/lua-mode@2bd9077
iyefrat/evil-tex@5f0d6fb -> iyefrat/evil-tex@87445d4
jcollard/elm-mode@e9fcf9c -> jcollard/elm-mode@f2e2d00
joaotavora/sly@5966d68 -> joaotavora/sly@41f4d65
jorgenschaefer/pyvenv@9b3678b -> jorgenschaefer/pyvenv@045ff94
jrblevin/markdown-mode@ac9ea26 -> jrblevin/markdown-mode@359347b
jwiegley/emacs-async@d7e7f79 -> jwiegley/emacs-async@9a8cd0c
jyp/attrap@778382e -> jyp/attrap@a5bc695
leanprover/lean-mode@5c50338 -> leanprover/lean-mode@bf32bb9
ledger/ledger-mode@32fef09 -> ledger/ledger-mode@19b84dc
nathankot/company-sourcekit@abf9bc5 -> nathankot/company-sourcekit@a1860ad
necaris/conda.el@dce431b -> necaris/conda.el@6db0720
non-Jedi/eglot-jl@84cff9d -> non-Jedi/eglot-jl@49f170e
nonsequitur/inf-ruby@c6990a6 -> nonsequitur/inf-ruby@03dd9c9
ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat@0ad8d0a -> ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat@5dd6574
ocaml/dune@65e04ba -> ocaml/dune@75ecfe3
ocaml/merlin@635923d -> ocaml/merlin@5731826
ocaml/tuareg@37a6730 -> ocaml/tuareg@b59c422
pashky/restclient.el@abc307b -> pashky/restclient.el@2cc1fd3
polymode/polymode@b3871e9 -> polymode/polymode@7d1f822
pythonic-emacs/anaconda-mode@344727c -> pythonic-emacs/anaconda-mode@4f367c7
seagle0128/grip-mode@2855205 -> seagle0128/grip-mode@c0ca789
sebasmonia/sharper@d610b83 -> sebasmonia/sharper@08277b6
swift-emacs/swift-mode@ad12a30 -> swift-emacs/swift-mode@1b47a09
technomancy/fennel-mode@ba14a7d -> technomancy/fennel-mode@a908db8
tpapp/julia-repl@7ce38a9 -> tpapp/julia-repl@79e686e
ziglang/zig-mode@2d0eb23 -> ziglang/zig-mode@0babe7e

Closes #5221
2021-07-11 17:52:08 -04:00
.github Remove checkboxes in issue forms 2021-07-08 15:11:39 -04:00
bin Drop Emacs 26.x support 2021-07-06 02:31:52 -04:00
core Don't log hooks 2021-07-11 17:52:08 -04:00
docs Merge pull request #5208 from pqitr/patch-1 2021-07-08 14:10:44 -04:00
modules Bump :lang 2021-07-11 17:52:08 -04:00
test Minor refactoring across the board 2021-05-23 22:09:07 -04:00
.dir-locals.el git-commit-major-mode = git-commit-elisp-text-mode #4335 2020-11-29 14:35:31 -05:00
.gitignore ignore extension installed by lang/dart and recover behaviour of +vterm/here 2021-04-02 22:53:07 +08:00
early-init.el Minor refactors, reformatting, & comment revision 2021-07-11 17:52:08 -04:00
init.el core: minor refactors and comment revisions 2021-05-06 18:36:32 -04:00
init.example.el Add init.example.el one-liner for :tools lsp 2021-07-06 02:32:38 -04:00
LICENSE AN UPDATE UNLIKE ANYTHING YOU'VE EVER SEEN 2021-01-18 17:45:29 -05:00
README.md Drop Emacs 26.x support 2021-07-06 02:31:52 -04:00

Doom Emacs

InstallDocumentationFAQScreenshotsContribute

Made with Doom Emacs Minimum Emacs version supported: 27.1 Latest commit Build status: develop Discord Server Discourse server

Doom Emacs Screenshot


Table of Contents

Introduction

It is a story as old as time. A stubborn, shell-dwelling, and melodramatic vimmer—envious of the features of modern text editors—spirals into despair before he succumbs to the dark side. This is his config.

Doom is a configuration framework for GNU Emacs tailored for Emacs bankruptcy veterans who want less framework in their frameworks, a modicum of stability (and reproducibility) from their package manager, and the performance of a hand rolled config (or better). It can be a foundation for your own config or a resource for Emacs enthusiasts to learn more about our favorite operating system.

Its design is guided by these mantras:

  • Gotta go fast. Startup and run-time performance are priorities. Doom goes beyond by modifying packages to be snappier and load lazier.
  • Close to metal. There's less between you and vanilla Emacs by design. That's less to grok and less to work around when you tinker. Internals ought to be written as if reading them were part of Doom's UX, and it is!
  • Opinionated, but not stubborn. Doom is about reasonable defaults and curated opinions, but use as little or as much of it as you like.
  • Your system, your rules. You know better. At least, Doom hopes so! It won't automatically install system dependencies (and will force plugins not to either). Rely on doom doctor to tell you what's missing.
  • Nix/Guix is a great idea! The Emacs ecosystem is temperamental. Things break and they break often. Disaster recovery should be a priority! Doom's package management should be declarative and your private config reproducible, and comes with a means to roll back releases and updates (still a WIP).

Check out the FAQ for answers to common questions about the project.

Features

  • Minimalistic good looks inspired by modern editors.
  • Curated and sane defaults for many packages, (major) OSes, and Emacs itself.
  • A modular organizational structure for separating concerns in your config.
  • A standard library designed to simplify your elisp bike shedding.
  • A declarative package management system (powered by straight.el) with a command line interface. Install packages from anywhere, not just (M)ELPA, and pin them to any commit.
  • Optional vim emulation powered by evil-mode, including ports of popular vim plugins like vim-sneak, vim-easymotion, vim-unimpaired and more!
  • Opt-in LSP integration for many languages, using lsp-mode or eglot
  • Support for many programming languages. Includes syntax highlighting, linters/checker integration, inline code evaluation, code completion (where possible), REPLs, documentation lookups, snippets, and more!
  • Support for many tools, like docker, pass, ansible, terraform, and more.
  • A Spacemacs-esque keybinding scheme, centered around leader and localleader prefix keys (SPC and SPCm for evil users, C-c and C-c l for vanilla users).
  • A rule-based popup manager to control how temporary buffers are displayed (and disposed of).
  • Per-file indentation style detection and editorconfig integration. Let someone else argue about tabs vs spaces.
  • Project-management tools and framework-specific minor modes with their own snippets libraries.
  • Project search (and replace) utilities, powered by ripgrep and ivy or helm.
  • Isolated and persistent workspaces (also substitutes for vim tabs).
  • Support for Chinese and Japanese input systems.
  • Save a snapshot of your shell environment to a file for Emacs to load at startup. No more struggling to get Emacs to inherit your PATH, among other things.

Prerequisites

  • Git 2.23+
  • Emacs 27.1+ (27.2 is recommended, or native-comp).
  • ripgrep 11.0+
  • GNU find
  • OPTIONAL: fd 7.3.0+ (improves file indexing performance for some commands)

Doom is comprised of ~150 optional modules, some of which may have additional dependencies. Visit their documentation or run bin/doom doctor to check for any that you may have missed.

Install

git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/hlissner/doom-emacs ~/.emacs.d
~/.emacs.d/bin/doom install

Then read our Getting Started guide to be walked through installing, configuring and maintaining Doom Emacs.

It's a good idea to add ~/.emacs.d/bin to your PATH! Other bin/doom commands you should know about:

  • doom sync to synchronize your private config with Doom by installing missing packages, removing orphaned packages, and regenerating caches. Run this whenever you modify your private init.el or packages.el, or install/remove an Emacs package through your OS package manager (e.g. mu4e or agda).
  • doom upgrade to update Doom to the latest release & all installed packages.
  • doom doctor to diagnose common issues with your system and config.
  • doom env to dump a snapshot of your shell environment to a file that Doom will load at startup. This allows Emacs to inherit your PATH, among other things.
  • doom build to recompile all installed packages (use this if you up/downgrade Emacs).

Roadmap

Doom is an active and ongoing project. To make that development more transparent, its roadmap (and other concerns) are published across three github project boards and a newsletter:

  • Development Roadmap: roughly outlines our goals between release milestones and their progress.
  • Plugins under review: lists plugins we are watching and considering for inclusion, and what their status for inclusion is. Please consult this list before requesting new packages/features.
  • Upstream bugs: lists issues that originate from elsewhere, and whether or not we have local workarounds or temporary fixes for them.
  • Doom's newsletter (not finished) will contain changelogs in between releases.

Getting help

Emacs is no journey of a mere thousand miles. You will run into problems and mysterious errors. When you do, here are some places you can look for help:

  • Our documentation covers many use cases.
  • With Emacs built-in help system documentation is a keystroke away:
    • For functions: SPC h f or C-h f
    • For variables: SPC h v or C-h v
    • For a keybind: SPC h k or C-h k
    • To search available keybinds: SPC h b b or C-h b b
  • Run bin/doom doctor to detect common issues with your development environment and private config.
  • Check out the FAQ, in case your question has already been answered.
  • Search Doom's issue tracker in case your issue was already reported.
  • Hop on our Discord server; it's active and friendly! Keep an eye on the #announcements channel, where I announce breaking updates and releases.

Contribute

PRs Welcome Elisp styleguide Donate on liberapay Donate on paypal

Doom is a labor of love and incurable madness, but I'm only one guy. Doom wouldn't be where it is today without your help. I welcome contributions of any kind!

  • I ❤️ pull requests and bug reports (see the Contributing Guidelines)!
  • Don't hesitate to tell me my Elisp-fu sucks, but please tell me why.
  • Hop on our Discord server and say hi! Help others, hang out or talk to me about Emacs, gamedev, programming, physics, pixel art, anime, gaming -- anything you like. Nourish this lonely soul.
  • If you'd like to support my work financially, buy me a drink through liberapay or paypal. My work contends with studies, adventures in indie gamedev and freelance work. Donations help me allocate more time to my Emacs and OSS capers.