Document how to use the newly introduced variables to enable sayid and
clj-refactor.
Also update the documentation on adding CIDER-related dependencies. CIDER 0.10
is three years old now, so I think the case where cider middleware isn't
injected automatically is getting rare. However there is still a good use case
for running your Clojure process outside of Emacs/CIDER, meaning you don't get
to benefit from `cider-jack-in`'s magic insjections, so I have focused more on
that case, adding information for clj-refactor's and sayid's middleware, as well
as CIDER's.
Fix issue #9271: Setting clojure-enable-fancify-symbols to t causes
the following to the be printed repeatedly in the message buffer:
invalid face reference: t
The problem is that the clojure/fancify-symbols function adds font-lock
keywords with highlight forms containing face-name expressions that
evaluate to the return value of compose-region, which apparently is t;
this value is interpreted as a face name.
The solution to this problem is that the face-name expressions should
evaluate to nil, which will be interpreted as an empty list of properties
instead of a face name.
* layers/+lang/clojure/funcs.el (clojure/fancify-symbols): Define keywords
using face-name expressions that evaluate to nil.
The function `cider-current-repl-buffer` does not exist anymore in cider after PR [#2324](https://github.com/clojure-emacs/cider/pull/2324) was merged.
It broke the usage of functions in the clojure layer that sent used `spacemacs//cider-eval-in-repl-no-focus`, which sends forms to be evaluated in the repl buffer without focusing on it.
The fix is to use `cider-current-repl` instead of `cider-current-repl-buffer`
Replace push with add-to-list in layer init functions and related code.
Modify spacemacs|add-toggle to check for and update an existing toggle in
spacemacs-toggles and only create a new toggle if none already existed.
Replace a conditional push onto erc-packages with use of :toggle.
When initializing which-key, set which-key-replacement-alist to its default
or customized setting before adding all the Spacemacs replacements. We
want to keep the stock replacements but avoid adding duplicates of the
Spacemacs replacements.
Replace the emacs-lisp-mode-hook lambda with a named function to avoid
adding duplicate hooks (which can add duplicate definitions of the
evil-surround pair).
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.
clojurescript-mode, clojurec-mode and clojurex-mode are used for .cljs, .cljc
and cljx files respectively, which should always be balanced and thus have safe
structural editing enabled.
I feel like we should start from scratch on this one and carefully choose the
defaults.
Also this settings is a very personal setting so if we make some buffers
useless we must have a consensus on it. Marking all special buffers starting
with `*` as useless is too aggressive and make Spacemacs less POLA since two
consecutive press on SPC TAB may not revert to the original buffer.
Delete layer evil-cleverparens and move the package to spacemacs-evil layer.
The feature is called "Safe structurral editing" for lisp dialects. Support for
it is added via pre-init functions in each of the concerned layer and proper
documentation is added to their README.org files.
This also removes the recently added package evil-smartparens. The goal is
to choose the best package for evil safe structural editing. For now we use
evil-cleverparens as we supported it first, if evil-smartparens is shown to be
a better package we will be able to switch to it.
The function `clojure-toggle-keyword-string` will convert a string to a keyword,
or keyword to a string.
The keybinding is added under the Clojure refactor menu, in the
"cycle/clean/convert" section.
`SPC m r c :`
As this is a `clojure-mode` function, it is defined in the clojure-mode
refactoring keybinding section of packages.el.
Clojure layer attempted to provide `C-j` and `C-k` keybindings
to the cider-repl-mode but there was a bug.
This fixes the bug and adds those keybindings to the documentation.
By convention, code markup (`~`) is reserved for keybindings in Org-based
documentation in Spacemacs. Verbatim markup (`=`) is reserved for code and
other code-like things. So change several readmes to reflect this convention.
Use verbatim markup for things like (non-exhaustive list):
- Emacs Lisp functions, modes, buffers, etc.
- Environment variables
- Directory paths
- Code in general