From 7aa42785944aea1acebeff96db0db7afedc8fdec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Aryadev Chavali Date: Mon, 23 Sep 2024 16:46:26 +0100 Subject: (Emacs/config)~text changes --- Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org | 71 +++++++++++++++++++++++------------------- 1 file changed, 39 insertions(+), 32 deletions(-) (limited to 'Emacs') diff --git a/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org b/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org index 4025e0e..e66cb8b 100644 --- a/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org +++ b/Emacs/.config/emacs/config.org @@ -305,17 +305,21 @@ Adjust font sizes for my devices. ** Startup screen The default startup screen is quite bad in all honesty. While for a first time user it can be very helpful in running the tutorial and -finding out more about Emacs, for someone who's already configured it +finding more about Emacs, for someone who's already configured it there isn't much point. -The scratch buffer is an interaction buffer, made when Emacs is first -started, to quickly prototype Emacs Lisp code. When startup screen is -disabled, this buffer is the first thing presented on boot for Emacs. -So we can use it to store some useful information. +The scratch buffer is created at boot. When the splash screen isn't +enabled, it is the first buffer a user sees. By default, it is in +~lisp-interaction-mode~, which allows one to prototype Emacs Lisp +code. + +I mostly use the scratch buffer to hold snippets of code and to write +text (usually then copy-pasted into other applications). So +~text-mode~ is a good fit for that. -2024-06-04: I use to load [[*Org mode][org-mode]] here for the scratch -buffer and it literally added 2 seconds of load time, so let's just -use fundamental mode and call it a day. +2024-06-04: I use to load [[*Org mode][org-mode]] in the scratch +buffer and it added 2 seconds of load time, so let's just use +fundamental mode and call it a day. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package emacs @@ -350,17 +354,15 @@ Configure the blinking cursor. #+end_src ** Mode line The mode line is the little bar at the bottom of the buffer, just -above the minibuffer. It can store quite literally anything, but -generally stuff like the buffer name, file type, column and line info, -etc is put there. +above the minibuffer. It can store essentially any text, but +generally details about the current buffer (such as name, major mode, ) is placed there. The default mode-line is... disgusting. It displays information in an unintelligible format and seems to smash together a bunch of information without much care for ordering. Most heartbreaking is -that *anything* can seemingly append new information without any -purview, which can be really annoying. This means it can be very -overstimulating to look at, without even being that immediately -informative. +that *anything* can seemingly append new information to it without any +purview, which is *REALLY* annoying. It can be very overstimulating +to look at, without even being that immediately informative. I've got a custom Emacs lisp package ([[file:elisp/better-mode-line.el][here]]) which sets up the default @@ -424,8 +426,8 @@ the first character of the evil state capitalised" Turning off borders in my window manager was a good idea, so turn off the borders for Emacs, so called fringes. However, some things like [[info:emacs#Compilation Mode][Compilation Mode]] do require fringes -to provide arrows. So I use the default-minimal fringe style (exactly -1 pixel on either side of the window) to ensure I get those. +to provide arrows. So I use a minimal fringe style (exactly 1 pixel +on either side of the window) to ensure I get those. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package fringe @@ -454,20 +456,24 @@ to the same value so it'll keep the cursor centred. #+end_src * Core packages For my core packages, whose configuration doesn't change much anyway, -** General -General provides a great solution for binding keys. It has evil and -use-package support so it fits nicely into configuration. In this -case, I define a "definer" for the "LEADER" keys. Leader is bound to -~SPC~ and it's functionally equivalent to the doom/spacemacs leader. -Local leader is bound to ~SPC ,~ and it's similar to doom/spacemacs -leader but doesn't try to fully assimilate the local-leader map, -instead just picking stuff I think is useful. This forces me to learn -only as many bindings as I find necessary; no more, no less. - -I also define prefix leaders for differing applications. These are -quite self explanatory by their name and provide a nice way to -visualise all bindings under a specific heading just by searching the -code. +** General - Bindings package +Vanilla Emacs has the ~bind-key~ function (and the ~bind-key*~ macro) +for this, but [[*Evil][Evil]] has it's own ~evil-define-key~. I'd +like a unified interface for using both, hence I use =general=. +General provides a set of very useful macros for defining keys for a +variety of different situations. One may redefine any key in any +keymap, bind over different Evil states, add =which-key= +documentation, create so-called "definers" which act as wrapper macros +over some pre-defined configuration, etc. + +Here I setup the rough outline of how bindings should be made at the +global scope, namely: ++ Use "SPC" as a "leader", the root of all major bindings ++ Use "\" as a local-leader, the root of all mode-specific bindings ++ A ton of "definers" for the different sub bindings for the leader + key ++ ~nmmap~ macro, for defining keys under both normal and motion + states. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package general @@ -563,7 +569,8 @@ code. (general-evil-setup t)) #+end_src *** Some binds for Emacs -Some bindings that I couldn't fit elsewhere easily. +Here are some bindings for Emacs using general and the definers +created previously. This should be relatively easy to understand. #+begin_src emacs-lisp (use-package emacs -- cgit v1.2.3-13-gbd6f