This would switch between 'doom-tomorrow' for use with the GUI and
'base16-tomorrow' when using the terminal. Previously the base16 themes has some
issues with GUI emacs and doom was much better. However, since a913143ee when I
forked base16 I have been making small tweaks and don't use the doom themes any
more.
This is now time to remove them and go full base16
This is the first implementation of the fmt-mode built with 'reformatter'. This
removes the CLI tool that was calling all the different formatters and replaces
it with an emacs mode.
The CLI tool was an attempt to create a common CLI tool to format code. In
reality this just became hard to maintain and was only ever used in the emacs
formatter. To format code in the CLI I was just using the upstream tools.
See: https://github.com/purcell/emacs-reformatter
When my custom tab was getting set on all modes it was not letting me tab in
counsel or any of the command like modes.
This now only uses the supper tab in prog-mode where this really applies.
Move all of the package installation from the default package.el to quelpa. This
has the main advantage of being able to update packages better. I have also got
a few package coming from forks and custom repos.
This also removes all of the `ensure t` from the use-package statements as we
have already set `use-package-always-ensure` so its not needed.
This is a port of the original super tab I had in vim. It has a hierarchy of
checks for actions when using the tab so I can use tab for snippet expanding,
expanding emmet expressions.
Currently this dose not support tab for cycling though completions, and I am
sure there will be some bugs in some situations.
Add clangd config args for the LSP config.
Remove all the custom company ordering and overriding to add in the snippets in
to the completion menu. This was only causing issues, so we now have to remember
what the snippets are. We can think about adding in a select snippet command via
counsel or something if this becomes a bigger issue.
Add in compilation notifications via `notify-send` cli tool. This helps when
testing or compiling is taking a long time an I put it into the background. When
it is done we now get desktop notifications
Add a new project type for Practically Makefile projects that are using
conventional tools.
This implements a few features all based around PHP and JavaScript projects. The
most notable features are:
- Compilation error detection for Jest JS testing framework
- Compilation error detection for Psalm PHP static analyser
- Alternate file support for Codeception "Cest" files
- JS test commands supporting "Jest"
- PHP test commands supporting "Codeception", "PHP Unit" and "Simple PHP Unit"
- Full project test support detecting the file type and the test command to run
I am sure this was installed before, it must have been removed when I started
making the repo public.
Anyway this adds it all back and also sets up the emacs package for using it
when writing.
Now the puppet packages get loaded by default. I don't really know why it was
not getting loaded, it must have been some time since I have needed to edit any
puppet config
Moves the setting of the font size onto a function so it can be used
dynamically. This is for when I am moving emacs across monitors with different
DPI's.
Also move base-16-themes to my fork
This is mostly used when editing GitHub and GitLab comments that boath support
markdown. This allows me to have the correct highlighting and snippet support
This adds shellcheck for creating better scripts and bats mode for testing
support.
It also added .env files to the mode list so I get highlighting in .env files
This removes all of the boiler plate code that was copied when fist moving away
from spacemacs and taken from the emacs from scratch config.
There is some inspiration about capturing notes from org-roam and putting them
into a directory for filing before they get put into the wiki.
This is the first move to start managing my notes / life with org-mode and its
started off really nicely. I think this will keep evolving and we can see where
it goes.
This is the language we are doing mode configuration in at work now. Cue was
nice but still ab bit new and jsonnet has been around for a lot longer. Cue also
works best with go but we are not doing any of that at work so jsonnet was the
winner.
This is mainly for jsx where the base emacs packages dont really do a good job
especially will typescript tsx files.
This is also giving it a go in php mode where I was getting some funky things
happening in doc blocks.
When editing code comments on git platforms like github the input is not very
good when trying to input code. A good example of this is when trying to insert
a tab indent and it will tab away from the input you are typing into.
The edit-server package allows you to open an emacs buffer to edit you comment
or issue into. This will solve the tab issues and give you all of your editor
comforts like auto closing brackets and snippets.
When running the compile command in emacs the buffer dose not scroll with the
output by default.
This now set it to follow the output so you can see the full output as it
happened not just the final result.
When using lsp-mode with flycheck it hijacks all of the checkers that have been
defined for all of the languages. When added other checkers they never get used
because they are all overridden by lsp-mode.
This adds a function so we can define checkers per mode then we can have lsp and
another checker that is specific for the language
This is a format on save code formatter for multiple languages. It is based on
prettier.el but is using a custom cli tool for formatting.
This is the emacs port of format.vim a plugin I created to do formatting in the
same way but for vim.
See: site-modules/core/files/vim/plugin/format.vim
This is so we can add and develop some of the missing features of the
theme. After using them for a bit I will start to submit them back upstream in a
PR
This adds file operation command to emacs so you can quickly rename and copy
files.
The problem with the normal copy file if that it misses removing the old buffer
if its a rename and dose not move to the new buffer. This leads to (more than I
like to admit) editing the new file thinking its the old file.
By updating the buffers and automatically switching this prevents this.
Update the lsp to improve the performance and editing experience. The completion
has been disabled so we can configure it manually to include snippets and file
paths into the company code completion.
Company has been configured to override the tab behaviour to always expand
snippets whenever there is a available snippet. The default behaviour is to
cycle through the completion.
There a quite a few fixes and feature here to make the terminal experience of
emacs better. Most of this is only enabled when running in the terminal.
1) Better tmux integration with navigating between splits and also highlighting
the active window between emacs and tmux so you can better see the active window
you are working in.
2) Mouse and clipboard support through the x window manager so "yank" copies
text into the system clipboard
3) Changing the cursor style between insert and normal mode inside the terminal
this is not the case in default evil mode.
This was really annoying when using JSX. When adding a `=` it would always add
in the quotes to make `=""`, this is not good when writing JSX when a lot of the
time you want `={}`. Now that this is disabled I can make the decision of what I
want to add
Now in insert mode when editing you can add a semi colon at the end of the
current line my pressing CTRL-;. This will then put the cursor after that ready
to continue the line or press enter to start a new line. This is inspired by
some old vim key bindings I had and a vscode plugin called coloniser.