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author | Aryadev Chavali <aryadev@aryadevchavali.com> | 2021-10-20 06:07:33 +0100 |
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committer | Aryadev Chavali <aryadev@aryadevchavali.com> | 2021-10-20 06:07:33 +0100 |
commit | 04c80df2b77a4bc98c44b075e5cfbc307d23ac94 (patch) | |
tree | ee95ef55656ce48b584d9e2f642e33eb59ce28e1 /Emacs | |
parent | c78fa94260462a887be0d9a64fdbe7ba4e781dbb (diff) | |
download | dotfiles-04c80df2b77a4bc98c44b075e5cfbc307d23ac94.tar.gz dotfiles-04c80df2b77a4bc98c44b075e5cfbc307d23ac94.tar.bz2 dotfiles-04c80df2b77a4bc98c44b075e5cfbc307d23ac94.zip |
(Emacs)~corrections
Using flyspell.
Diffstat (limited to 'Emacs')
-rw-r--r-- | Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org | 31 |
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 13 deletions
diff --git a/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org b/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org index 5f2993f..0993ba9 100644 --- a/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org +++ b/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org @@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ Let's set all yes or no questions to single letter responses. (fset 'yes-or-no-p 'y-or-n-p) #+end_src ** Encoding -Set the encoding to utf-8-unix by default. +Set the encoding to UTF-8-Unix by default. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package emacs :straight nil @@ -60,14 +60,14 @@ setup the custom-file to exist in the var-directory (global-auto-revert-mode 1)) #+end_src ** Hide-show mode -Turn on hs minor mode for all prog-mode. +Turn on =hs-minor-mode= for all prog-mode. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package hideshow :straight nil :hook (prog-mode-hook . hs-minor-mode)) #+end_src ** Aesthetics -Load my custom "personal-theme" theme which is stored in the elisp +Load my custom "personal-theme" theme which is stored in the Emacs lisp folder (look at [[file:elisp/personal-theme.el][this file]]). #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package custom @@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ Vim doesn't have a nice way of adding new lines before or after the current line while staying in normal mode. You can use =o/O= to enter insert mode at a new line, but this isn't the same as being able to stay in normal mode while opening newlines and only adds extra -keypresses if your only purpose was to open up some lines. Enter +dx/newline +key presses if your only purpose was to open up some lines. Enter +dx/newline The logic is pretty simple: @@ -322,8 +322,8 @@ here. *** Evil Core Setup the evil package, with some opinionated keybindings: -- Switch =evil-upcase= and =evil-downcase= cos I'd rather have the - non-capital one be upcase due to how much I use it +- Switch =evil-upcase= and =evil-downcase= because I use =evil-upcase= + more - Switch =evil-goto-mark= and =evil-goto-mark-line= as I'd rather have the global one closer to the home row #+begin_src emacs-lisp @@ -371,7 +371,7 @@ Setup the evil package, with some opinionated keybindings: (evil-commentary-mode)) #+end_src *** Evil mc -Setup for multicursors in Evil mode. Don't let evil-mc setup it's own +Setup for multi cursors in Evil mode. Don't let evil-mc setup it's own keymap because it uses 'gr' as its prefix, which I don't like. Instead, bind some useful functions to my personal =+dx:evil-mc-map= @@ -450,7 +450,7 @@ execute-extended-command interface. It also provides support for ido or ivy (though I'm likely to use ido here) and allows you to switch between them. -It provides a lot of niceties such as presenting the keybind when +It provides a lot of niceties such as presenting the key bind when looking for a command. #+begin_src emacs-lisp @@ -1803,7 +1803,7 @@ flyspell-mode should be hooked to text-mode. *** Undo tree Undo tree is a system for handling the history of any buffer. It provides a very nice 'tree' visualiser (hence the name) for revisions -of a file or buffer, and allows you to move around different verisons +of a file or buffer, and allows you to move around different versions at once, without using a VCS like git (all in Emacs, baby). #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package undo-tree @@ -1945,7 +1945,7 @@ However, if necessary later, define a function that may activate tabs locally. (setq-local indent-tabs-mode t)) #+end_src *** Colourising compilation -Colourising the compilation buffer so ansi color codes get computed. +Colourising the compilation buffer so ANSI colour codes get computed. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package compile :defer t @@ -2021,7 +2021,7 @@ use the current buffer?) but it works out. (setq sql-display-sqli-buffer-function nil)) #+end_src ** Ada -Check out [[file:elisp/ada-mode.el][ada-mode*]], my custom ada-mode that replaces the default one. +Check out [[file:elisp/ada-mode.el][ada-mode*]], my custom =ada-mode= that replaces the default one. This mode just colourises stuff, and uses eglot to do the important stuff. @@ -2161,7 +2161,7 @@ learnt the basics of org). #+end_src *** Org on save If ~+org/compile-to-pdf-on-save-p~ is non-nil, then compile to \(\LaTeX\) -and run an async process to compile it to a pdf. Doesn't make Emacs +and run an async process to compile it to a PDF. Doesn't make Emacs hang (like ~org-latex-export-to-pdf~) and doesn't randomly crash (like the async handler for org-export). #+begin_src emacs-lisp @@ -2211,7 +2211,7 @@ look is nice to have. :hook (org-mode-hook . org-pretty-tags-mode)) #+end_src *** Org superstar -Org superstar adds cute little unicode symbols for headers, much +Org superstar adds cute little Unicode symbols for headers, much better than the default asterisks. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package org-superstar @@ -2381,6 +2381,8 @@ book so it's useful to have some Emacs binds for it. "sd" #'racket-send-definition)) #+end_src ** CSharp +I sometimes use C# when I'm bored or if I'm trying out a language +feature. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package csharp-mode :defer t @@ -2404,6 +2406,9 @@ book so it's useful to have some Emacs binds for it. ("return" . "⟼"))) #+end_src ** Java +I kinda dislike Java, but if necessary I will code in it. Might have +to use an IDE for the cooler features, but use Emacs for editing. +Just setup a style and some pretty symbols. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package ob-java :straight nil |