Added keybindings for the Sesman REPL session management commands to the Clojure
layer, following the Spacemacs keybinding conventions.
https://docs.cider.mx/cider/0.23/usage/managing_connections.html
Sesman has been a part of CIDER for many versions now and provides session
management for nREPL connections (in fact any connections).
Sesman keybinds are placed in the `SPC m c` menu, providing a cleaner separation
between sending code to the repl and session management.
See issue #12593 and PR #13140 which covers the background for the design of
these additional keybindings.
Formatting the region and defun keybinds have been added, along with formatting
for edn files. Moved to `=` menu to match Spacemacs convention.
Evaluation up to point keybinding has also been added.
Documentation in the README has been updated to complete the description of the
existing Clojure layer, as well as including details specific to the new
keybindings.
Bind `SPC x d l` to `delete-blank-lines` (default: `C-x C-o`)
If the cursor is on a blank line:
- with blank lines above or below, then they are reduced to only one.
- without blank lines above or below, then the blank line is removed.
destructuring-bind is a macro in the deprecated package: cl
SPC-TAB calls: spacemacs/alternate-buffer
In the spacemacs-base distribution, it shows the message:
spacemacs/alternate-buffer: Symbol’s function definition is void: destructuring-bind
Also renamed three instances of destructuring-bind in the rirc layer.
The snippets seem to have been accidentally changed in this commit:
a2de9a63af (diff-75e0388987cdf040d82762426e40e5a5R434)
where other instances of checking for a layer, were changed to check for a
package.
It doesn't work to check if the haskell package is used in the user config
section, because the haskell package hasn't loaded yet.
Reverting it to check if the haskell layer is used works.
I would expect the default sort order in treemacs to be alphabetically
ascending, and indeed until recently it appeared to be so. But the
setting in spacemacs is `alphabetic-desc`, and has been ever since the
layer was introduced. How did this work?
The answer is https://github.com/Alexander-Miller/treemacs/pull/577.
Until recently the alphabetical ascending/descending orders were swapped
accidentally. So we need to now (more logically) set the sort order to
`alphabetic-asc`.
Spacemacs configures `org-present` to inline images while presenting. That much
makes sense. But it has a hook to turn them off unconditionally when exiting
presentation mode. This causes a problem if you just want images to show in and
out of presentation mode.
STEPS TO REPRODUCE
1. Create an Org file
2. Add a link to a file
3. Set `#+STARTUP: inlineimages`
4. `M-x org-present`
5. Exit presentation mode
EXPECTED
Because of `#+STARTUP: inlineimages` images are still inlined.
ACTUAL
The inline images have been removed upon exiting the presentation mode.
FIX
Check `org-startup-with-inline-images` on exiting presentation mode and only
remove the inline images if it is false.
TESTING
To ensure that this did not introduce a regression of the converse behavior, I
also tested with `#+STARTUP: noinlineimages`, and it still turned off the images
when exiting the presentation.
The function: helm-org-get-candidates was removed upstream.
Improvements:
Recenter the target candidate.
Reversed the helm headings list, to match the order of the
questions in FAQ.org, so that the Common questions are
listed first.
Removed the : (colon) after the heading: How do I
in FAQ.org, to match the other parent headings.
Add Spacemacs keybindings to the Clojure layer for all the sesman functions.
Sesman has been a part of CIDER for many versions now and provides session
management for nREPL connections (in fact any connections).
Several keybindings relating to the use of a specific repl been migrated the
`e` evaluation menu and `es` sent-to-repl-buffer sub-menu, providing a cleaner
separation between repl connection and session management and interacting with a
specific repl.
Updated layer documentation and keybindings in README.org file.
Added changes to CHANGELOG.develop
Resolves#12593
Make rainbow-identifiers not colorize special operators and macros, so they
always visually stand out. Rationale behind this change is that special
operators and macros in Lisp may be considered "syntax" elements, so it makes
sense to have them visually distinguished at all times.
Add key bindings to the `SPC p l` persp switch project prompt:
- helm `C-d`
- ivy `d` in the `M-o` actions list
They create a new perspective with the project name
and open a dired buffer at the project root.
The suggestion to also add it to ivy was provided by nixmaniack.