diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Emacs/.config')
-rw-r--r-- | Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org | 35 |
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org b/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org index 7c6a191..e3eff68 100644 --- a/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org +++ b/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org @@ -523,19 +523,18 @@ these capabilities but there are further packages which integrate them into Evil. *** Evil core Setup the evil package, with some opinionated keybindings: -- Switch ~evil-upcase~ and ~evil-downcase~ because I use ~evil-upcase~ ++ 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 ++ Switch ~evil-goto-mark~ and ~evil-goto-mark-line~ as I'd rather have the global one closer to the home row -- Push the mark when exiting visual mode - - On entering visual mode, the mark is set, so by pushing it when - exiting we can use the mark-ring for other stuff -- Use 'T' character as an action for transposing objects ++ Use 'T' character as an action for "transposing objects" + + Swapping any two textual "objects" is such a Vim thing (the verb + object model) but by default it can't seem to do it. But Emacs + can... #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package evil :demand t :straight t - :hook (evil-visual-state-entry-hook . push-mark) :general (leader "w" '(evil-window-map :which-key "Window") @@ -660,7 +659,7 @@ in providing good user experience. By default Emacs provides 'completions-list' which produces a buffer of options which can be searched and selected. We can take this further though! -Ido and Icomplete are packages distributed with Emacs to provide +Ido and IComplete are packages distributed with Emacs to provide greater completion interfaces. They utilise the minibuffer to create a more interactive experience, allowing incremental searches and option selection. @@ -758,9 +757,11 @@ looking for a command. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package amx :straight t - :hook (after-init-hook . amx-mode) + :defer 2 :init - (setq amx-backend 'ivy)) + (setq amx-backend 'ivy) + :config + (amx-mode)) #+end_src *** Orderless Orderless sorting method for completion, probably one of the best @@ -1583,7 +1584,8 @@ Here I setup dired with a few niceties (dired-mode-hook . dired-omit-mode) :init (setq-default dired-listing-switches "-AFBlu --group-directories-first" - dired-omit-files "^\\." + dired-omit-files "^\\." ; dotfiles + dired-omit-verbose nil dired-dwim-target t dired-kill-when-opening-new-dired-buffer t) (with-eval-after-load "evil-collection" @@ -2508,8 +2510,7 @@ expression. Rainbow flag in your Lisp source code. :general (mode-leader "r" #'rainbow-delimiters-mode) :hook - (lisp-mode-hook . rainbow-delimiters-mode) - (emacs-lisp-mode-hook . rainbow-delimiters-mode)) + ((lisp-mode-hook emacs-lisp-mode-hook racket-mode-hook) . rainbow-delimiters-mode)) #+end_src * Org mode Org is, at its most basic, a markup language. =org-mode= is a major @@ -3265,18 +3266,16 @@ execution of d-mode blocks and alias ~D-mode~ with ~d-mode~. (with-eval-after-load "eglot" (add-to-list 'eglot-server-programs '(rust-mode "rust-analyzer")))) #+end_src -** WAIT Racket -:PROPERTIES: -:header-args:emacs-lisp: :tangle no -:END: +** Racket A scheme with lots of stuff inside it. Using it for a language design book so it's useful to have some Emacs binds for it. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package racket-mode :straight t + :defer t :hook (racket-mode-hook . racket-xp-mode) :display - ("\\*Racket.*" + ("\\*Racket REPL*" (display-buffer-at-bottom) (window-height . 0.25)) :init |