This moves the point and content of the window close to where you were
before you ran perltidy. Of course if perltidy adds or removes a
significant amount of characters / lines as part of tidying, the point
will be moved by that amount. However in practice this I've found this
to be close enough.
* 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.