org-mu4e was already handled in the mu4e layer which is the correct place for
this.
Added notmuch to mu4e layer, maybe not the right place for this but for now
it is OK.
* Make RET and TAB (C-m and C-i) perform the same actions as <return>
and <tab> so the maps work in the terminal.
* Catch <return> in workspaces transient state so that it exits without
executing a command (like already done for layouts).
* Add "workspace w/helm/ivy" to docstring, mirroring the layouts
docstring.
* layers/+lang/python/funcs.el (spacemacs/anaconda-view-forward-and-push):
Added helper function to go forward and hit RET
* layers/+lang/python/packages.el (python/init-anaconda-mode):
- use new evilification macro
- use helper function to go ahead and push button when hitting `RET`
- Add `C-j`, `C-k` for easy navigation in anaconda-view-mode when multiple
references are displayed. Doesn't conflict with normal `hjkl` navigation in
other views of `anaconda-view-mode`
Fix#7538Fix#5737
Problem:
Spacemacs rewrites the evil-mc-mode-line variable, to remove the evil-mc mode
line text, when there's only one cursor. The rewrite blocks the recent evil-mc
updates, that made the multi cursor, mode line text, more readable.
Solution:
Use the new evil-mc-one-cursor-show-mode-line-text variable, to only hide the
mode line text, when there's one cursor. This unblocks the current, and any
future updates, that the evil-mc package makes to the mode line text.
Currently the ocaml layer requires opam in order to work. However
opam is only really required for an easy installation of the
required ocaml binaries. The only place where opam is used
instead is to add the merlin files of the merlin installed
via opam instead of the merlin files from melp.
This commit introduces a fallback if opam is not installed but
ocamlmerlin is installed, since the melpa package of merlin
is already installed through packages.
This allows the user to, for instance, include the spacemacs tree as a
git submodule of their configuration repository without seeing
superfluous warnings.
SQL, by convention, uses upper-case keywords, although lower-case works just as
well. As humans, the separation between upper-case and lower-case helps scan and
parse the code much more quickly.
Clojure layer attempted to provide `C-j` and `C-k` keybindings
to the cider-repl-mode but there was a bug.
This fixes the bug and adds those keybindings to the documentation.
Mark up code that is mentioned in the documentation of some readmes.
In the case of “long options”, like for example `--with-emacs`, this is not just
cosmetic. On GitHub, Org files are apparently rendered in such a way that
strings like `--` in non-verbatim text (i.e. not verbatim-quoted nor
code-quoted) is transformed to `–` (EN DASH U+2013). So the string:
… --with-emacs option:
Will show up like this:
… –with-emacs option:
Also mark up nearby not-marked-up code mentions. But this pattern was what was
searched for, so this mostly changes the abovementioned kind of thing.
By convention, code markup (`~`) is reserved for keybindings in Org-based
documentation in Spacemacs. Verbatim markup (`=`) is reserved for code and
other code-like things. So change several readmes to reflect this convention.
Use verbatim markup for things like (non-exhaustive list):
- Emacs Lisp functions, modes, buffers, etc.
- Environment variables
- Directory paths
- Code in general
ADD:
- layers/+lang/go/config.el Added new variable `go-use-test-args` to allow
specifying additional arguments being passed to `go test.
CHANGE:
- layers/+lang/go/packages.el Updated `go-run-tests` to automatically concat
the new variable `go-use-test-args` to args passed to `go test`.