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.
The newly introduced function to compile an elpa package
was very much redundant with the existing recompile-elpa function.
I have adapted recompile-elpa so that it can be used for the helm action too.
In addition I have bound recompile-elpa to `SPC c C-c` to allow users to
easily recompile their entire elpa directory if the need arises.
I have also removed the error handling in the helm action in favor of
standard error reporting via the *Compile-Log* buffer.
- Removed the word `Manipulation` from the transient state titles:
- Buffer Manipulation Transient State and Window Manipulation TS
- Expanded the TS abbreviation to Transient State
- Documented the Buffer Transient State key binding:
`q` to quit the transient state
- Capitalized `Transient State` in the titles
- Window Transient State:
- Added a line break after the title in the folded hint.
This allows for more keys to be visible horizontally.
- Moved up the [?] help key after the title, so that
it's in the same place in both the folded and full
transient state.
The org-mode todo key has been changed from just: t
to: SPC m T T (same as: , T T)
in this PR: Use evil-org from MELPA #9041
The PR authors reasons were:
>- single-shortcut keys are few in number and valuable
>- the vim/evil defaults for those keys are designed for editable modes, and org
> is an editable mode
>- practically nowhere else in Spacemacs are such keys overridden
>- the benefit of making an exception in this case is dubious
>- it's not too difficult to configure on a user level
>
>For sure, many people will be toggling todo state more often than using the t
jump operator while in org-mode, but I'm not convinced that this is worth
violating POLA in org-mode. But of course if there is consensus that I'm wrong
then I'm happy to be convinced otherwise.
source: https://github.com/syl20bnr/spacemacs/pull/9041#issuecomment-309758098
- Mentioned that: `t` can be restored for toggling todo, and added a link to the
instructions in the org layer documentation:
https://github.com/syl20bnr/spacemacs/blob/develop/layers/%2Bemacs/org/README.org#org-with-evil-org-mode
- Rewrote some sentences.
- Wrapped some paragraphs at 80 chars.
documentation.org
- added visual line navigation (w/w/o) globally keys and unicode/ascii symbol
faq.org
- updated snippet for enabling visual line navigation globally on startup
0ffdb353f9 changed the default config template to use a point size instead of a pixel size. Change the defvar declaration as well.
Commit modified by duianto:
Updated font size in doc/documentation.org
Thanks sdwolfz for the suggestion to add underscore to the transient states,
then the shift key doesn't have to be released if it was held down to press `+`.
Added key bindings:
Evil numbers:
`SPC n _` decrease number under point
in the transient state:
`j` decrease number under point
`k` increase number under point
`SPC T T _` decrease transparency
`SPC z x _` scale down font
`SPC z f _` zoom out frame
Update documentation:
Zoom frame:
`q` quit transient state
Evil numbers:
`SPC n =` increase number under point
`SPC n _` decrease number under point
`0..9` add a number prefix argument
`q` quit transient state
Fixed a typo and made a small rewrite of the tip about using a prefix argument.
Added keys to transient states:
Font scaling:
Added `_` scale down
Reordered `k` assignment to match the order in the transient state
Frame transparency:
Added `_` decrease
Reordered `k` assignment to match the order in the transient state
Evil numbers:
Added `k` increase
Added `_` and `j` decrease
Zoom frame:
Added `_` zoom frame out
Reordered `k` assignment to match the order in the transient state
Which-key entries for Evil numbers `SPC n`:
Group together keys that call the same command:
From: + and =
To: +,=
From: - and _
To: -,_
`SPC h T e` for `emacs-tutorial` (aliased from `help-with-tutorial` for a more
descriptive name)
`SPC h T v` for `evil-tutor-start`
Added a wikipedia link to the `vi` article, where the origins of modal editing
is discussed.
Emacs 26 added built-in support for line numbers, relative line numbers, and
visual line numbers. Spacemacs supports only absolute and relative, but there is
no way to access the visual mode. It's hard to get around this, since Spacemacs
abstracts line numbers to a reasonably high degree.
Arguably, `visual` is much more useful than `relative` as a display type. Visual
line numbers are like relative line numbers, but only lines that are actually
showing are counted. This means:
1. Hidden lines are not counted. If a large amount of text is folded, the line
numbers won't jump from "10" to "546". This is particularly useful in
buffers like `magit-status`, where a large amount of information is folded
by default.
2. Lines that are wrapped are counted as multiple lines, since they're being
displayed as multiple lines in the editor. Each visual line will be
numbered - unlike `relative`, where the entire thing is numbered... Once.
With standard relative line numbers, you can't actually navigate using the line
numbers in the sidebar as soon as folded or wrapped lines are introduced. Since
this is one of the main use cases for relative line numbers, this is a big
problem.
Visual mode fixes that problem. Every line that's being displayed is labelled.
Numbers always correspond to the actual number of lines you'd need to navigate
to reach that line.
This commit extends Spacemacs' line number interface to provide visual line
number support.
It is nicer when user can stay in the "home row" for basic operations like
zooming in and out
Font Scaling Transient State
`k` scale up
`j` scale down
Frame Transparency Transient State
`k` increase transparency
`j` decrease transparency
Zoom Frame Transient State
`k` zoom frame in
`j` zoom frame out
Added two additional Zoom Frame TS keys:
`m` max frame
`f` fullscreen
The FAQ has an entry for configuring Spacemacs to use double-space as the
sentence delimiter. This FAQ entry instructs the reader to set the
sentence-end-double-space variable in the dotspacemacs/user-init function.
The problem is that the spacemacs-defaults layer sets
sentence-end-double-space when it loads, and Spacemacs loads layers after
calling dotspacemacs/user-init, which means the layer overrides any setting
for sentence-end-double-space in dotspacemacs/user-init.
To solve this problem, this commit modifies the FAQ entry to instruct the
reader to set the variable in the dotspacemacs/user-config function, which
Spacemacs runs after loading layers.
The FAQ entry was added in commit ee4ad69847.
* doc/FAQ.org: Instruct the reader to set sentence-end-double-space in
dotspacemacs/user-init rather than in dotspacemacs/user-config.
Just cherry picked the last commit in the
previous PR and noticed that I have just
got part of the changes due to multiple
commits in the PR.
However as I did already push I am now
providing the missing changes manually
rather than to rollback the commit.
Helm has removed the helm-wikipedia-suggest command, so delete Spacemacs's
key binding for the command.
4ef8299d78
* CHANGELOG.develop: Add entry.
* doc/DOCUMENTATION.org: Delete documentation for the key binding for
helm-wikipedia-suggest.
* layers/+completion/helm/packages.el (helm/init-helm): Delete the key
binding for helm-wikipedia-suggest.
By analogy with the "zz", "zb", "zt" vim / evil bindings, this adds an
additional key binding "z" for `recenter-top-bottom` to the following
transient states which navigate around the buffer in large jumps:
- auto-symbol-highlight
- error
- buffer
- vcs
- org-babel
This allows for repositioning of the buffer for visibility without having to
exit the transient state.
Minor updates are also made to documentation of other transient states.