* Fix various isolated typos
"apppend" -> "append"
"availabe" -> "available"
"Descripti using ternon" -> "Description"
"you have not them" -> "you don't have them"
"new on" -> "new one"
"plained" -> "curved"
"repel" -> "REPL"
"vairable" -> "variable"
* Fix a few errors in the CoffeeScript layer readme
Add a missing "the".
Correct a reference to the layer as "javascript" to "coffeescript".
Fix the syntax on the link to CoffeeLint.
* Fix typos: "dofile" -> "dotfile"
* Fix typos: "formated" and "formating"
"formated" -> "formatted"
"formating" -> "formatting"
* hy: Fix docstrings in funcs.el
Fix copy-and-pasted docstring text for
spacemacs/hy-shell-eval-current-form-and-go and
spacemacs/hy-shell-eval-region-and-go.
* Fix typos: "indendation" -> "indentation"
* Fix typos: "the the", "a a"
Fix duplicated (or misplaced) articles.
* Fix typos: "wether" -> "whether"
* Fix typos: "intialize" -> "initialize"
This reverts commit 29c78ce841 and all other fixes
that have been made afterwards.
The motivation is that use-package is seen by many as a replacement for
`require`. Is use-package always defer the loading of packages then is breaks
this use case, this does not respect POLA so even if it was making Spacemacs
loading faster (up to 3s faster on some startup on my machine) we just cannot
use it, it would be irresponsible. Spacemacs should be easy to use, loading
performance will come with time but it is not a priority.
The keybindings to `rtags-select-other-window', `rtags-select' and
`rtags-bury-or-delete' should only take effect when `rtags-mode-map' is
active, instead of being activate for every buffer in evil normal state.
- Move rtags key bindings under `SPC m g` prefix
- Document rtags support and key bindings in README.org
- attempt to implement gtags fallback using
https://github.com/Andersbakken/rtags#fall-back-to-other-taggers
- make c-c++ layer dependend on gtags layer (gtags layer is automatically
installed when the c-c++ layer is used)
- sort packages config in packages.el
- use a dolist instead of a function to define rtags key bindings
Resolve#10041
The spacemacs/clang-format-buffer function doesn't exist. It should be replaced
with clang-format-buffer. This error was introduced in 01ddc98cef.
This change makes the c-c++ layer configure company-c-headers to search for and
list completion alternatives according to the priority list found in 'man gcc'.
If supported, the default system include paths are also fetched from gcc's
configuration instead of being hard coded to "/usr/include" and
"/usr/local/include". This also remedies the problem where the C++ standard
library headers does not show up as completion alternatives without manual
addition of include paths (see #4493, #8655).
Solve part of #7628. Additionally, #7629 is no longer needed.
Add support for formatting lines, functions, and buffers with clang-format. Each
function produces a clear message on success.
The README was updated to reflect the usage of the new key bindings. References
to binding clang-format to the tab key were removed.
This replaces the older pattern
:toggle (configuration-layer/package-usedp ..)
This implementation ensures that :disabled-for honors dependent packages, i.e.
if package a depends on package b, which is owned by layer c, and layer c is
disabled for layer d, then neither package a nor b will be configured for layer
d. Previously, this was only true for package a, but not b.
This commit also fixes:
- configuration-layer/describe-package now shows which post-init and pre-init
functions are disabled, if any
- Does not recreate all layer objects unconditionally when calling
configuration-layer/discover-layers. Previously, this led to all layers being
recreated after e.g. `SPC h SPC`, without any of the dotfile information.
Since this information is now necessary for
configuration-layer/describe-package, it’s important that we don’t clear the
indexed layers when invoking this function.
For now realug is used only to C and C++ so it makes more sense to add it to
the c-c++ layer for now.
Later if we can generalize the support of realgud for other languages and we
can start a debugger layer.
spacemacs/add-flycheck-hook was not really hooking anything, change the name
to better reflect what it does.
Also changed the push for a add-to-list to avoid duplicates.
Enabling a company backend for a specific mode was a tedious tasks with code
scattered at different locations, one for local variable definitions, one for
company hook function definitions and another where the backends were pushed to
the local variables (which was problematic, since we ended up pushing the same
backends over and over again with `SPC f e R`, pushes have been replaced by
add-to-list calls in the new macro).
All these steps are now put together at one place with the new macro
spacemacs|add-company-backends, check its docstring for more info on its
arguments.
This macro also allows to define arbitrary buffer local variables to tune
company for specific modes (similar to layer variables via a keyword :variables)
The code related to company backends management has been moved to the
auto-completion layer in the funcs.el file. A nice side effect of this move is
that it enforces correct encapsulation of company backends related code. We can
now easily detect if there is some configuration leakage when the
auto-completion layer is not used. But we loose macro expansion at file loading
time (not sue it is a big concern though).
The function spacemacs|enable-auto-complete was never used so it has been
deleted which led to the deletion of the now empty file core-auto-completion.el.
The example in LAYERS.org regarding auto-completion is now out of date and has
been deleted. An example to setup auto-completion is provided in the README.org
file of the auto-completion layer.
Otherwise I was seeing these transformations:
invocation-dir = C:/Some/Directory
-I../another/directory
-IC:/another/directory
Became
-Ic:/Some/Directory./another/directory
-IC:/SOME/DIRECTORY/C:/another/directory
Hook semantic is to be used with run-hooks API and run all hooks
sequentially, jump list semantic is different since the running
functions are not guaranteed to be executed so we prefer using regular
list API to manage jump-lists.
- Add option to disable by default
- Use local-vars hook to allow per-project enable/disable
- Don’t enable helm-gtags-mode (no need)
- Move emacs bindings from helm-gtags-mode-map to ggtags-mode-map
This commit defines:
- spacemacs-default-jump-handlers: a list of functions that can jump to
definition in ALL modes.
- spacemacs-jump-handlers-MODE: a list of functions that can jump to
definition in MODE.
- spacemacs-jump-handlers: a buffer-local list of functions that can
jump to definition. This is made up of the values of the two previous
variables whenever a given major mode is activated.
- spacemacs/jump-to-definition: a function that tries each function in
spacemacs-jump-handlers in order, and stops when one of them takes us
somewhere new.
- spacemacs|define-jump-handlers: a macro that
* defines spacemacs-jump-handlers-MODE, possibly filled with initial
functions
* defines a function that is added to the hook of the given MODE
* binds “SPC m g g” of that MODE to spacemacs/jump-to-definition
This is an attempt to harmonize all the different approaches to jumping.
Specifically,
- Existing intelligent jump packages that work for only a single mode
should go to the beginning of spacemacs-jump-handlers-MODE. E.g.
anaconda for python, ensime for scala, etc.
- Packages like gtags that work for several modes (but potentially not
all) and which is dumber than the intelligent jumpers should go the
the END of spacemacs-jump-handlers-MODE.
- Packages like dumb-jump that work for all modes should go to
spacemacs-default-jump-handlers.
In all cases the order of the jump handlers in each list should be from
most to least intelligent.
Fixes#6619
Helm seems to treat "!" specially in pattern matching, so having a ! in
the pattern string when traversing directories is problematic. This
change fixes#2737, because as far as I can tell "+" has no special
meaning in a helm pattern.
Of course, we can choose a different character, but I'm fond of "+" as
representing "more layers here".