This will allow people using spacemacs-base to have finer control over what additional packages they install on top of base. The proposed split is as follows spacemacs-editing: - aggressive-indent - avy - bracketed-paste - clean-aindent-mode - eval-sexp-fu - expand-region - hexl - hungry-delete - iedit - lorem-ipsum - move-text - neotree - pcre2el - smartparens spacemacs-editing-visual-packages: - adaptive-wrap - auto-highlight-symbol - highlight-indentation - highlight-numbers - highlight-parentheses - hl-anything - indent-guide - linum-relative - rainbow-delimiters - volatile-highlights spacemacs-evil-packages: - evil-anzu - evil-args - evil-exchange - evil-iedit-state - evil-indent-plus - evil-jumper - evil-lisp-state - evil-mc - evil-nerd-commenter - evil-matchit - evil-numbers - evil-search-highlight-persist - evil-terminal-cursor-changer - evil-tutor - evil-unimpaired spacemacs-language-packages: - define-word - google-translate spacemacs-ui-packages: - ace-link - ace-window - buffer-move - centered-cursor - desktop - doc-view - flx-ido - info+ - open-junk-file - window-numbering spacemacs-ui-visual-packages: - fancy-battery - golden-ratio - leuven-theme - neotree - smooth-scrolling - spaceline - vi-tilde-fringe - zoom-frm
3.8 KiB
Paradox
Project for modernizing Emacs' Package Menu. With package ratings, usage statistics, customizability, and more.
Here are some visual comparisons:
Regular Package Menu
Paradox
Paradox (multi-line)
These screenshots use smart-mode-line, but a similar effect is obtained with the regular mode-line.
Usage
Paradox can be installed from Melpa with M-x package-install RET paradox
.
It can also be installed manually in the usual way, just be mindful of
the dependencies.
To use it, simply call M-x paradox-list-packages
(instead of the
regular list-packages
).
This will give you most features out of the box. If you want to be
able to star packages as well, just configure the
paradox-github-token
variable then call paradox-list-packages
again.
If you'd like to stop using Paradox, you may call paradox-disable
and go back to using the regular list-packages
.
Current Features
Several Improvements
Paradox implements many small improvements to the package menu
itself. They all work out of the box and are completely customizable!
(Also, hit h
to see all keys.)
- Visit the package's homepage with
v
(or just use the provided buttons). - View a list of recent commits with
l
. - Use
paradox-require
instead ofrequire
to automatically install absent packages. - Shortcuts for package filtering:
f r
filters by regexp (occur
);f u
display only packages with upgrades;f k
filters by keyword (emacs 24.4 only).
And some more...
hl-line-mode
enabled by default.- Display useful information on the mode-line and cleanup a bunch of useless stuff.
- Customization! Just call
M-x paradox-customize
to see what you can do.- Customize column widths.
- Customize faces (
paradox-star-face
,paradox-status-face-alist
andparadox-archive-face
). - Customize local variables.
Package Ratings
Paradox also integrates with
GitHub Stars, which works as rough package rating system.
That is, Paradox package menu will:
- Display the number of GitHub Stars each package has (assuming it's in a github repo, of course);
- Possibly automatically star packages you install, and unstar packages you delete (you will be asked the first time whether you want this);
- Let you star and unstar packages by hitting the
s
key; - Let you star all packages you have installed with
M-x paradox-star-all-installed-packages
.
Item 1. will work out of the box, the other items obviously
require a github account (Paradox will help you generate a token the
first time you call paradox-list-packages
).
Known Bugs
- On some cases there's an annoying gnutls error message after downloading the star counts
gnutls.c: [0] (Emacs) fatal error: The TLS connection was non-properly terminated.
.
If anyone knows how to fix it, I'm all ears.
How Star Displaying Works
We generate a map of Package Name -> Repository
from
Melpa's recipe
directory, some repos may correspond to more than one package.
This map is used count the stars a given package has.
This doesn't mean you need Melpa to see the star counts, the numbers
will be displayed regardless of what archives you use.
Currently, packages that are not hosted on GitHub are listed with a
blank star count, which is clearly different from 0-star packages
(which are displayed with a 0, obviously).
If you know of an alternative that could be used for these packages,
open an issue
here, I'd love to hear.