+ Now uses an overriding keymap for leader keys, so that it is always
available, even outside of normal/visual states. In insert/emacs
states, or in sessions where evil is absent, an alternative prefix is
used for leader/localleader keys. See these variables:
+ doom-leader-prefix
+ doom-leader-alt-prefix
+ doom-localleader-prefix
+ doom-localleader-alt-prefix
+ Keybinds now support alternative prefixes through the new :alt-prefix
property. This is useful for non-evil users and non-normal evil
states. By default, this is M-SPC (leader) and M-SPC m (localleader).
+ Removed +evil-commands flag from config/default (moved to
feature/evil/+commands.el).
+ config/default/+bindings.el has been split into
config/default/+{evil,emacs}-bindings.el, which one is loaded depends
on whether evil is present or not. The latter is blank, but will soon
be populated with a keybinding scheme for non-evil users (perhaps
inspired by #641).
+ The define-key! macro has been replaced; it is now an alias for
general-def.
+ Added unmap! as an alias for general-unbind.
+ The following modifier key conventions are now enforced for
consistency, across all OSes:
alt/option = meta
windows/command = super
It used to be
alt/option = alt
windows/command = meta
Many of the default keybinds have been updated to reflect this switch,
but it is likely to affect personal meta/super keybinds!
The map! macro has also been rewritten to use general-define-key. Here
is what has been changed:
+ map! no longer works with characters, e.g. (map! ?x #'do-something) is
no longer supported. Keys must be kbd-able strings like "C-c x" or
vectors like [?C-c ?x].
+ The :map and :map* properties are now the same thing. If specified
keymaps aren't defined when binding keys, it is automatically
deferred.
+ The way you bind local keybinds has changed:
;; Don't do this
(map! :l "a" #'func-a
:l "b" #'func-b)
;; Do this
(map! :map 'local "a" #'func-a
"b" #'func-b)
+ map! now supports the following new blocks:
+ (:if COND THEN-FORM ELSE-FORM...)
+ (:alt-prefix PREFIX KEYS...) -- this prefix will be used for
non-normal evil states. Equivalent to :non-normal-prefix in general.
+ The way you declare a which-key label for a prefix key has changed:
;; before
(map! :desc "label" :prefix "a" ...)
;; now
(map! :prefix ("a" . "label") ...)
+ It used to be that map! supported binding a key to a key sequence,
like so:
(map! "a" [?x]) ; pressing a is like pressing x
This functionality was removed *temporarily* while I figure out the
implementation.
Addresses: #448, #814, #860
Mentioned in: #940
ws-butler only strips trailing spaces on lines that have been modified.
+ ws-butler is disabled if editorconfig enables
trim_trailing_whitespace, which resorts to delete-trailing-whitespace
instead.
+ Updates doom|(enable|disable)-delete-trailing-whitespace hooks to use
ws-butler-mode.
Fixes an issue where exec-shell-from-path could not be installed on
Linux or Windows.
Doom used :ignore because, at the time, it supported a workflow where
your Emacs config was shared over dropbox or rslsync across multiple
computers. This workflow is no longer supported (it was very buggy!), so
this is no longer necessary. :ignore should also be reserved for private
use and not used internally.
Editorconfig is given precedence. If it successfully sets an
indent_style or indent_size for the current buffer, automatic
indentation detection will be disabled.
Use-package broke in a recent update, as with Doom, since it relies so
heavily on it. To combat this issue arising again, use-package will be
installed from melpa-stable from now on.
Addresses #283
+ Add relative line number support (see doom-line-numbers-style)
+ Update doom/toggle-line-numbers
+ New hook functions: doom|enable-line-numbers,
doom|disable-line-numbers
Addresses #156
linum-mode *really* slows down buffers when they're displayed in more
than one window. This lag isn't present in nlinum. nlinum isn't perfect
either but... lesser of two evils.
This includes advisors and an ESC hook to mitigate the issue of
disappearing nlinum line numbers.