Currently, when a tsx file is edited, the typescript layer puts it into web
mode so we can properly edit/format the html that's inside. However, with this
you lose the awesome ", g g" keybinding which takes you to a definition of
the current function/variable. You also lose the ", g u" keybinding which
gives you all references of current function/variable. This PR adds
all the tide bindings that are in typescript mode into web mode while using the typescript layer.
NOTE:
I must add ("gg" tide-jump-to-definition) to the webList because spacemacs-jump-handlers-web-mode does not exist.
Using the header below is now deprecated in React.
```js
/** @jsx React.DOM */
```
However, there are situations where I have to use the *.js extension, and need to tell my text editor that the file has JSX.
I suggest switching to JSX mode if it detects a header starting with `@jsx`. Then I'll be able to do the following without breaking react.
```js
/** @jsx */
This is similar to the `Ctrl+Shift+T` keybinding found in major browsers, and
helps when accidentally killing a buffer (i.e. fat-fingering `SPC b d` when
meaning to press `SPC b s`).
Only buffers that resolve to existing files will be considered, and stored in a
stack which is pushed to and popped from on buffer kill.
`SPC m h h` is conventional key binding to show documentation for thing under
point. It is called by `spacemacs/evil-smart-doc-lookup`, so this change makes
`K` in normal state work as expected.
Replace the optional argument `no-install` by a global variable named
`spacemacs-sync-packages`.
Rename the hooks to reflect the renaming of the function.
Rename the flag `--no-sync` to the more explicit `--no-package-sync`
This adds a new startup flag `--skip-sync`. It will force spacemacs to skip
package synchonization. This can be useful in cases when you're working under
poor or restrictive network.
Thanks, @zaript, for this idea!