74fdbb6795
Enabling a company backend for a specific mode was a tedious tasks with code scattered at different locations, one for local variable definitions, one for company hook function definitions and another where the backends were pushed to the local variables (which was problematic, since we ended up pushing the same backends over and over again with `SPC f e R`, pushes have been replaced by add-to-list calls in the new macro). All these steps are now put together at one place with the new macro spacemacs|add-company-backends, check its docstring for more info on its arguments. This macro also allows to define arbitrary buffer local variables to tune company for specific modes (similar to layer variables via a keyword :variables) The code related to company backends management has been moved to the auto-completion layer in the funcs.el file. A nice side effect of this move is that it enforces correct encapsulation of company backends related code. We can now easily detect if there is some configuration leakage when the auto-completion layer is not used. But we loose macro expansion at file loading time (not sue it is a big concern though). The function spacemacs|enable-auto-complete was never used so it has been deleted which led to the deletion of the now empty file core-auto-completion.el. The example in LAYERS.org regarding auto-completion is now out of date and has been deleted. An example to setup auto-completion is provided in the README.org file of the auto-completion layer. |
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config.el | ||
funcs.el | ||
packages.el | ||
README.org |
asm layer
Description
This layer adds support for Assembly code. The built-in major mode for
editing assembly code in Emacs is asm-mode
.
The layer also adds nasm-mode
for NASM-specific syntax. Although nasm-mode
is intended for NASM, it actually works well with other variants of Assembly
in general, and provides Imenu integration so you can jump around with SPC s j
.
Features:
- Improved syntax highlighting.
- Automatic indentation.
- Auto-completion for symbol in opened buffers.
- Look up documentation for current instruction at cursor.
- Imenu integration.
Install
Layer
To use this configuration layer, add it to your ~/.spacemacs
. You will need to
add asm
to the existing dotspacemacs-configuration-layers
list in this
file.
PDFs
To look up the x86 instructions, two things are required:
- the
pdftotext
command line tool from Poppler:
sudo apt-get install poppler-utils
- Intel® 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer Manuals. Any PDF that contains the full instruction set reference will work, though volume 2 is the best choice for x86-lookup.
Then, set x86-lookup-pdf
to the location of your PDF document (Tip: If you use
Helm as your completion of choice, you can use SPC f f
to navigate to the
file, and press C-c i
to insert the path). For example, something like this:
(setq x86-lookup-pdf "~/64-ia-32-architectures-software-developer-instruction-set-reference-manual-325383.pdf")
The first time you launch the command, it can take a while for indexing, this is a one time operation and the result is cached for later use.
Key bindings
Key Binding | Description |
---|---|
SPC m h h |
Look up the documentation for instruction at point |
; |
Insert a comment |
Note: Quoted from the docstring of asm-comment
, the command bound to ;
:
Convert an empty comment to a `larger' kind, or start a new one.
These are the known comment classes:
1 -- comment to the right of the code (at the comment-column)
2 -- comment on its own line, indented like code
3 -- comment on its own line, beginning at the left-most column.
Suggested usage: while writing your code, trigger asm-comment
repeatedly until you are satisfied with the kind of comment.