;;; $DOOMDIR/config.el -*- lexical-binding: t; -*- ;; Place your private configuration here! Remember, you do not need to run 'doom ;; sync' after modifying this file! ;; Some functionality uses this to identify you, e.g. GPG configuration, email ;; clients, file templates and snippets. It is optional. ;; (setq user-full-name "John Doe" ;; user-mail-address "john@doe.com") ;; Doom exposes five (optional) variables for controlling fonts in Doom: ;; ;; - `doom-font' -- the primary font to use ;; - `doom-variable-pitch-font' -- a non-monospace font (where applicable) ;; - `doom-big-font' -- used for `doom-big-font-mode'; use this for ;; presentations or streaming. ;; - `doom-unicode-font' -- for unicode glyphs ;; - `doom-serif-font' -- for the `fixed-pitch-serif' face ;; ;; See 'C-h v doom-font' for documentation and more examples of what they ;; accept. For example: ;; ;;(setq doom-font (font-spec :family "Fira Code" :size 12 :weight 'semi-light) ;; doom-variable-pitch-font (font-spec :family "Fira Sans" :size 13)) ;; ;; If you or Emacs can't find your font, use 'M-x describe-font' to look them ;; up, `M-x eval-region' to execute elisp code, and 'M-x doom/reload-font' to ;; refresh your font settings. If Emacs still can't find your font, it likely ;; wasn't installed correctly. Font issues are rarely Doom issues! ;; There are two ways to load a theme. Both assume the theme is installed and ;; available. You can either set `doom-theme' or manually load a theme with the ;; `load-theme' function. This is the default: (setq doom-theme 'doom-one) (add-hook 'doom-load-theme-hook (lambda () (set-face-attribute 'font-lock-constant-face nil :weight 'bold) (set-face-attribute 'font-lock-function-name-face nil :weight 'bold) (set-face-attribute 'font-lock-keyword-face nil :weight 'bold) (set-face-attribute 'font-lock-type-face nil :weight 'bold) (set-face-attribute 'show-paren-match nil :background nil))) (after! whitespace (set-face-attribute 'whitespace-line nil :background nil)) ;; This determines the style of line numbers in effect. If set to `nil', line ;; numbers are disabled. For relative line numbers, set this to `relative'. (setq display-line-numbers-type t) ;; If you use `org' and don't want your org files in the default location below, ;; change `org-directory'. It must be set before org loads! (setq org-directory "~/Workspace/org/") ;; Whenever you reconfigure a package, make sure to wrap your config in an ;; `after!' block, otherwise Doom's defaults may override your settings. E.g. ;; ;; (after! PACKAGE ;; (setq x y)) ;; ;; The exceptions to this rule: ;; ;; - Setting file/directory variables (like `org-directory') ;; - Setting variables which explicitly tell you to set them before their ;; package is loaded (see 'C-h v VARIABLE' to look up their documentation). ;; - Setting doom variables (which start with 'doom-' or '+'). ;; ;; Here are some additional functions/macros that will help you configure Doom. ;; ;; - `load!' for loading external *.el files relative to this one ;; - `use-package!' for configuring packages ;; - `after!' for running code after a package has loaded ;; - `add-load-path!' for adding directories to the `load-path', relative to ;; this file. Emacs searches the `load-path' when you load packages with ;; `require' or `use-package'. ;; - `map!' for binding new keys ;; ;; To get information about any of these functions/macros, move the cursor over ;; the highlighted symbol at press 'K' (non-evil users must press 'C-c c k'). ;; This will open documentation for it, including demos of how they are used. ;; Alternatively, use `C-h o' to look up a symbol (functions, variables, faces, ;; etc). ;; ;; You can also try 'gd' (or 'C-c c d') to jump to their definition and see how ;; they are implemented. ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ;; Override doom configuration. ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ;; Remove org-agenda from dashboard. (let ((org-agenda-section (seq-find (lambda (item) (string= (nth 0 item) "Open org-agenda")) +doom-dashboard-menu-sections))) (delete org-agenda-section +doom-dashboard-menu-sections)) ;; Remove the silly doom newline advice. (advice-remove 'newline-and-indent #'+default--newline-indent-and-continue-comments-a) ;; I actually like it when Emacs recenters the screen while scrolling. This may ;; be an issue in large files. When that becomes an issue add an exception here. (setq scroll-conservatively 0) ;; Add some extra whitespace highlights to doom's opinion. (advice-add 'doom-highlight-non-default-indentation-h :after (lambda () (when (bound-and-true-p whitespace-mode) (appendq! whitespace-style '(trailing lines-tail empty)) (whitespace-mode +1)))) ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ;; Additional coniguration for doom modules. ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ;; Always open magit in other window. (after! magit (setq magit-display-buffer-function #'magit-display-buffer-traditional)) ;; Don't use the LSP formatter. (after! lsp (setq +format-with-lsp nil)) ;; Python virtualenv configuration. (after! lsp-pyright (setq lsp-pyright-venv-path (concat (getenv "HOME") "/.virtualenvs"))) ;; Rainbow delimiters in all prog-mode buffers. (add-hook! prog-mode #'rainbow-delimiters-mode-enable) ;; Make TRAMP easier to use for sudo on remote hosts. (after! tramp ;; Proxy all sudo connections via an ssh connection to the provided hostname. (add-to-list 'tramp-default-proxies-alist '(nil "\\`root\\'" "/ssh:%h:")) ;; This rule is an exception to the above so that local sudo does not proxy ;; via ssh. This has to be added last so that it is the first element. (add-to-list 'tramp-default-proxies-alist '("localhost" "\\`root\\'" nil))) ;; Extra VTerm configuration. (after! vterm (setq vterm-shell "/bin/zsh" vterm-max-scrollback 10000)) (map! :leader (:prefix-map ("o" . "open") (:when (featurep! :term vterm) :desc "Project VTerm" "p" #'+vterm/project/other-window :desc "Project VTerm (same window)" "P" #'+vterm/project/here :desc "VTerm" "t" #'+vterm/other-window :desc "VTerm (same window)" "T" #'+vterm/here))) ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ;; Configuration for additional packages on top of doom and its modules. ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ;; Faster navigation. (use-package! ace-jump-mode :bind (("C-c SPC" . ace-jump-mode))) ;; A nicer interface for ripgrep. Note that since doom required rg we don't ;; consider the case if it's not installed. (use-package! deadgrep :init (setq deadgrep-project-root-function (lambda () (read-directory-name "Base directory: " nil default-directory t))) :bind (("C-x C-g" . deadgrep)) (:map deadgrep-mode-map ("C-o" . +deadgrep-open-result-other-window) ("" . deadgrep-visit-result-other-window)) :config (defun +deadgrep-open-result-other-window () "Open the result in other window without changing to it." (interactive) (save-selected-window (deadgrep-visit-result-other-window)))) ;; Duplicate things. (use-package! duplicate-thing :bind (("M-C" . duplicate-thing))) ;; It's the 21st century, a file explorer should be pretty. (use-package! treemacs-icons-dired :after dired :hook (dired-mode . treemacs-icons-dired-mode)) ;; Kill line when calling kill-region without a selected region. (use-package! whole-line-or-region :config (define-key whole-line-or-region-local-mode-map [remap comment-dwim] nil) (whole-line-or-region-global-mode +1)) ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ;; Global configuration. ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- (setq-default ;; Standard fill-column width. fill-column 100 ;; Do not use tab characters for indentation. indent-tabs-mode nil ;; Kill whole line when point at beginning of line. kill-whole-line t ;; Always indent. Why would I ever want to insert a tab? tab-always-indent t ;; Default indentation size - applies even when indent-tabs-mode is nil. tab-width 8) ;; Highlight lines that are too long in whitespace mode. We set this with a hook ;; after local variables as fill-column is often set through dir-locals. (add-hook 'hack-local-variables-hook (lambda () (setq-local whitespace-line-column fill-column))) ;; CamelCase as separate words. (global-subword-mode +1) ;; Doom emacs recommends `visual-line-mode' as it claims wrapping is expensive. (global-visual-line-mode +1) ;; But "C-e" behaves differently in `visual-line-mode' than when wrapping. It ;; goes to the end of the visual line, not the logical line. This can be fixed ;; by defining the following aliases. (defalias #'end-of-visual-line #'end-of-line) (defalias #'beginning-of-visual-line #'beginning-of-line) (defun +indent-region-or-buffer () "Indent a region if selected, otherwise the whole buffer." (interactive) (if (region-active-p) (indent-region (region-beginning) (region-end)) (indent-region (point-min) (point-max)))) (defun +unfill-paragraph (&optional region) "Takes a multi-line paragraph and makes it into a single line of text." (interactive (progn (barf-if-buffer-read-only) '(t))) (let ((fill-column (point-max)) ;; This would override `fill-column' if it's an integer. (emacs-lisp-docstring-fill-column t)) (fill-paragraph nil region))) ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ;; Global keybindings. ;; ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- (map! ;; For functions defined above. "M-Q" #'+unfill-paragraph "C-M-\\" #'+indent-region-or-buffer ;; Create binding before dired is loaded. "C-x C-j" #'dired-jump ;; More convenient window switching. "M-o" #'other-window "C-x o" #'other-popup ;; Kill current buffer without prompting. :desc "kill-buffer" "C-x k" (lambda () (interactive) (let (kill-buffer-query-functions) (kill-buffer))) ;; Scroll up/down, but keep point in place. "C-<" (lambda() (interactive) (let ((scroll-preserve-screen-position nil)) (scroll-down 1))) "C->" (lambda() (interactive) (let ((scroll-preserve-screen-position nil)) (scroll-up 1))))