By default, transient hooks are defined as doom-transient-hook-N, where
N is a counter. This makes debugging them difficult.
Now, you may specify an id for the second argument. e.g.
(add-transient-hook! 'find-file-hook load-evil (require 'evil))
Will define doom|transient-hook-load-evil, which is easier to debug and
remove, if necessary.
~/.doom.d/modules is now a full module tree, like ~/.emacs.d/modules.
Symlinks are no longer involved.
Private modules can now shadow Doom modules. e.g.
~/.doom.d/modules/lang/org will take precendence over
~/.emacs.d/modules/lang/org.
Also, made doom--*-load-path variables public (e.g. doom--site-load-path
=> doom-site-load-path), and rearranged the load-path for a 10-15%
startup boost.
(add-hook! hook '(1 2 3)) should set hook to `(1 2 3 ,@old-hooks).
Before this, they would be pushed sequentially, resulting in hook =
`(3 2 1 ,@old hooks)`
set! used to aggressively evaluate its arguments (at expansion-time),
even if placed inside an after! block. This causes unavoidable errors if
those arguments use functions/variables that don't exist yet.
Fixes#112
+ enable lexical-scope everywhere (lexical-binding = t): ~5-10% faster
startup; ~5-20% general boost
+ reduce consing, function calls & garbage collection by preferring
cl-loop & dolist over lambda closures (for mapc[ar], add-hook, and
various cl-lib filter/map/reduce functions) -- where possible
+ prefer functions with dedicated opcodes, like assq (see byte-defop's
in bytecomp.el for more)
+ prefer pcase & cond (faster) over cl-case
+ general refactor for code readability
+ ensure naming & style conventions are adhered to
+ appease byte-compiler by marking unused variables with underscore
+ defer minor mode activation to after-init, emacs-startup or
window-setup hooks; a customization opportunity for users + ensures
custom functionality won't interfere with startup.