This refactor removes a lot of the 'training wheels' that doom
provides (i.e. no modeline, bindings, etc). Instead, I defined my own
modules and systems to help with those tasks. I am now using the default
emacs modeline, customised to my liking, as well as the default scratch
buffer as my startup page.
This basically allows me to have a finer degree of control over what my
Emacs is doing, which is great as I can remove redundant pieces that I
don't use.
The default haskell mode with ghci has good defaults, completion systems
and an overall workflow which I can really work with. This is better
than the LSP system which uses a lot of memory and CPU without much
returns in comparison to this method.
When using the inbuilt RSS module, this becomes my personal config for
that module.
However, when not using that and instead using the newsticker inbuilt
for Emacs, I've got a config for that as well.