Latest CIDER release uses the following commands for starting the REPL from
within Emacs
`cider-jack-in-clj` to start a Clojure REPL
`cider-jack-in-clj&cljs` to start a Clojure and ClojureScript REPL
`cider-jack-in-cljs` to start a ClojureScript repl
The older aliases are deprecated and are being removed in the latest beta
release of CIDER
`cider-jack-in`
`cider-jack-in-clojurescript`
Keybindings for these jack-in commands have been updated and as there are three
options they have been moved under the repl > jack-in
The top level of the Clojure mode menu has the existing keybindings updated to
use the new commands. A third top-level keybinding `&` has been added for
`cider-jack-in-clj&cljs`
Although the Clojure repl utils (clojure.repl) are including in the user
namespace in Clojure projects, they are not available in your application
namespace.
The existing CIDER function cider-repl-require-repl-utils adds the Clojure
repl utils into the current namespace, so you can use functions such as doc
and source.
This is often a source of confusion for those new to Clojure / CIDER.
Although the Clojure repl utils (clojure.repl) are including in the user
namespace in Clojure projects, they are not available in your application
namespace.
The existing CIDER function cider-repl-require-repl-utils adds the Clojure
repl utils into the current namespace, so you can use functions such as doc
and source.
This is often a source of confusion for those new to Clojure / CIDER.
add an internal variable for `lsp` layer `lsp-layer--active-mode-list`
to keep track of active major modes using lsp,
`spacemacs//lsp-declare-prefixes-for-mode` will check this variable
to decide whether to add prefix to which-key or not
`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.
In the upstream dash-docs and helm-dash documentation, they suggest a workflow
where users leave relatively little in `dash-common-docsets`, and instead add
per-mode hooks to enable specific docsets, since a user is unlikely to want
Python documentation while in a C++ buffer and vice versa. Currently, the
spacemacs dash layer will automatically discover all installed docsets and add
them to `dash-common-docsets`.
This commit adds a config option `dash-autoload-common-docsets` that can be set
to nil to skip the auto-loading and allow users to opt-in.
Co-Authored-By: duianto <otnaiud@gmail.com>
* core/core-funcs.el (spacemacs/alternate-buffer): Instead of using
switch-to-buffer, use set-window-buffer-start-and-point, specifying the
previous window start position and point if known. Replace use of
cl-find-if with cl-find.
* CHANGELOG.develop: Add entry for change to spacemacs/alternate-buffer.
Remove mention of powerline-scale property from the
.spacemacs.template font variable comment.
Update the changelog.develop entry for the mode line
separator scale when the utf-8 separator is used.
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's now agda2-auto-maybe-all. If you are not currently in a hole
it tries to `auto` all holes by default.
* Find and set an agda-version variable, to keep compatibility with
previous agda versions.
Revealed already bound navigation keys:
- `g` go to first candidate
- `G` go to last candidate
Moved `[q] quit` from bottom left to bottom right, to match other TSs.
Reduced spacing between keys and descriptions from two to one space.
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.
Fixed the minibuffer showing: `nil`
when `select-enable-clipboard` is `nil` and the current files
path/dir/file/line/column/etc. is copied with the keys under
the prefix: `SPC f y`