10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
23927d6948 Update .doom.d/init.el 2022-03-22 14:49:35 +00:00
29c71c29c1 Update packages.el 2022-03-22 14:45:27 +00:00
695acac882 Update .gitmodules 2022-03-22 10:31:20 -04:00
135f0595f9 Try to fix wonky submodule 2022-03-22 10:28:38 -04:00
8b25e7b66c Set doom-emacs submodule 2022-03-22 10:26:45 -04:00
f20fb3071e Remove more old emacs cruft 2022-03-21 23:09:03 -04:00
847884ddaf Switch to doom emacs config 2022-03-21 22:36:34 -04:00
09259e483e Set .gitlab-ci.yml to enable or configure SAST 2021-03-24 15:16:46 +00:00
b54b6897a2 bash: don't use realpath in prompt 2020-07-15 03:42:34 +00:00
0caf14af68 bash: fix some prompt quoting 2020-07-15 03:31:27 +00:00
10 changed files with 375 additions and 453 deletions

54
.doom.d/config.el Normal file
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;;; $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.
(setq user-full-name "Max Regan"
user-mail-address "mgregan2@gmail.com")
;; Doom exposes five (optional) variables for controlling fonts in Doom. Here
;; are the three important ones:
;;
;; + `doom-font'
;; + `doom-variable-pitch-font'
;; + `doom-big-font' -- used for `doom-big-font-mode'; use this for
;; presentations or streaming.
;;
;; They all accept either a font-spec, font string ("Input Mono-12"), or xlfd
;; font string. You generally only need these two:
;; (setq doom-font (font-spec :family "monospace" :size 12 :weight 'semi-light)
;; doom-variable-pitch-font (font-spec :family "sans" :size 13))
;; 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)
;; 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 "~/org/")
;; 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)
;; Here are some additional functions/macros that could 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.
;;
;; You can also try 'gd' (or 'C-c c d') to jump to their definition and see how
;; they are implemented.

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.doom.d/custom.el Normal file
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(custom-set-variables
;; custom-set-variables was added by Custom.
;; If you edit it by hand, you could mess it up, so be careful.
;; Your init file should contain only one such instance.
;; If there is more than one, they won't work right.
'(ansi-color-names-vector
["#282c34" "#ff6c6b" "#98be65" "#ECBE7B" "#51afef" "#c678dd" "#46D9FF" "#bbc2cf"])
'(custom-safe-themes
'("835868dcd17131ba8b9619d14c67c127aa18b90a82438c8613586331129dda63" "246a9596178bb806c5f41e5b571546bb6e0f4bd41a9da0df5dfbca7ec6e2250c" default))
'(exwm-floating-border-color "#191b20")
'(fci-rule-color "#5B6268")
'(highlight-tail-colors
((("#333a38" "#99bb66" "green")
. 0)
(("#2b3d48" "#46D9FF" "brightcyan")
. 20)))
'(jdee-db-active-breakpoint-face-colors (cons "#1B2229" "#51afef"))
'(jdee-db-requested-breakpoint-face-colors (cons "#1B2229" "#98be65"))
'(jdee-db-spec-breakpoint-face-colors (cons "#1B2229" "#3f444a"))
'(objed-cursor-color "#ff6c6b")
'(pdf-view-midnight-colors (cons "#bbc2cf" "#282c34"))
'(rustic-ansi-faces
["#282c34" "#ff6c6b" "#98be65" "#ECBE7B" "#51afef" "#c678dd" "#46D9FF" "#bbc2cf"])
'(vc-annotate-background "#282c34")
'(vc-annotate-color-map
(list
(cons 20 "#98be65")
(cons 40 "#b4be6c")
(cons 60 "#d0be73")
(cons 80 "#ECBE7B")
(cons 100 "#e6ab6a")
(cons 120 "#e09859")
(cons 140 "#da8548")
(cons 160 "#d38079")
(cons 180 "#cc7cab")
(cons 200 "#c678dd")
(cons 220 "#d974b7")
(cons 240 "#ec7091")
(cons 260 "#ff6c6b")
(cons 280 "#cf6162")
(cons 300 "#9f585a")
(cons 320 "#6f4e52")
(cons 340 "#5B6268")
(cons 360 "#5B6268")))
'(vc-annotate-very-old-color nil))
(custom-set-faces
;; custom-set-faces was added by Custom.
;; If you edit it by hand, you could mess it up, so be careful.
;; Your init file should contain only one such instance.
;; If there is more than one, they won't work right.
)

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.doom.d/init.el Normal file
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;;; init.el -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
;; This file controls what Doom modules are enabled and what order they load
;; in. Remember to run 'doom sync' after modifying it!
;; NOTE Press 'SPC h d h' (or 'C-h d h' for non-vim users) to access Doom's
;; documentation. There you'll find a "Module Index" link where you'll find
;; a comprehensive list of Doom's modules and what flags they support.
;; NOTE Move your cursor over a module's name (or its flags) and press 'K' (or
;; 'C-c c k' for non-vim users) to view its documentation. This works on
;; flags as well (those symbols that start with a plus).
;;
;; Alternatively, press 'gd' (or 'C-c c d') on a module to browse its
;; directory (for easy access to its source code).
(doom! :input
;;chinese
;;japanese
;;layout ; auie,ctsrnm is the superior home row
:completion
company ; the ultimate code completion backend
;;helm ; the *other* search engine for love and life
;;ido ; the other *other* search engine...
;;ivy ; a search engine for love and life
vertico ; the search engine of the future
:ui
;;deft ; notational velocity for Emacs
doom ; what makes DOOM look the way it does
doom-dashboard ; a nifty splash screen for Emacs
;;doom-quit ; DOOM quit-message prompts when you quit Emacs
(emoji +unicode) ; 🙂
hl-todo ; highlight TODO/FIXME/NOTE/DEPRECATED/HACK/REVIEW
;;hydra
;;indent-guides ; highlighted indent columns
;;ligatures ; ligatures and symbols to make your code pretty again
;;minimap ; show a map of the code on the side
modeline ; snazzy, Atom-inspired modeline, plus API
;;nav-flash ; blink cursor line after big motions
;;neotree ; a project drawer, like NERDTree for vim
ophints ; highlight the region an operation acts on
(popup +defaults) ; tame sudden yet inevitable temporary windows
;;tabs ; a tab bar for Emacs
;;treemacs ; a project drawer, like neotree but cooler
;;unicode ; extended unicode support for various languages
vc-gutter ; vcs diff in the fringe
vi-tilde-fringe ; fringe tildes to mark beyond EOB
window-select ; visually switch windows
workspaces ; tab emulation, persistence & separate workspaces
;;zen ; distraction-free coding or writing
:editor
;;(evil +everywhere); come to the dark side, we have cookies
file-templates ; auto-snippets for empty files
fold ; (nigh) universal code folding
;;(format +onsave) ; automated prettiness
;;god ; run Emacs commands without modifier keys
;;lispy ; vim for lisp, for people who don't like vim
;;multiple-cursors ; editing in many places at once
;;objed ; text object editing for the innocent
;;parinfer ; turn lisp into python, sort of
;;rotate-text ; cycle region at point between text candidates
snippets ; my elves. They type so I don't have to
word-wrap ; soft wrapping with language-aware indent
:emacs
(dired +icons) ; making dired pretty [functional]
electric ; smarter, keyword-based electric-indent
;;ibuffer ; interactive buffer management
undo ; persistent, smarter undo for your inevitable mistakes
vc ; version-control and Emacs, sitting in a tree
:term
eshell ; the elisp shell that works everywhere
;;shell ; simple shell REPL for Emacs
;;term ; basic terminal emulator for Emacs
vterm ; the best terminal emulation in Emacs
:checkers
syntax ; tasing you for every semicolon you forget
;;(spell +flyspell) ; tasing you for misspelling mispelling
;;grammar ; tasing grammar mistake every you make
:tools
;;ansible
debugger ; FIXME stepping through code, to help you add bugs
;;direnv
docker
editorconfig ; let someone else argue about tabs vs spaces
;;ein ; tame Jupyter notebooks with emacs
(eval +overlay) ; run code, run (also, repls)
;;gist ; interacting with github gists
lookup ; navigate your code and its documentation
lsp ; M-x vscode
magit ; a git porcelain for Emacs
make ; run make tasks from Emacs
;;pass ; password manager for nerds
;;pdf ; pdf enhancements
;;prodigy ; FIXME managing external services & code builders
;;rgb ; creating color strings
;;taskrunner ; taskrunner for all your projects
;;terraform ; infrastructure as code
;;tmux ; an API for interacting with tmux
;;upload ; map local to remote projects via ssh/ftp
:os
(:if IS-MAC macos) ; improve compatibility with macOS
tty ; improve the terminal Emacs experience
:lang
;;agda ; types of types of types of types...
;;beancount ; mind the GAAP
cc ; C > C++ == 1
;;clojure ; java with a lisp
;;common-lisp ; if you've seen one lisp, you've seen them all
;;coq ; proofs-as-programs
;;crystal ; ruby at the speed of c
;;csharp ; unity, .NET, and mono shenanigans
;;data ; config/data formats
;;(dart +flutter) ; paint ui and not much else
;;dhall
;;elixir ; erlang done right
;;elm ; care for a cup of TEA?
emacs-lisp ; drown in parentheses
;;erlang ; an elegant language for a more civilized age
;;ess ; emacs speaks statistics
;;factor
;;faust ; dsp, but you get to keep your soul
;;fortran ; in FORTRAN, GOD is REAL (unless declared INTEGER)
;;fsharp ; ML stands for Microsoft's Language
;;fstar ; (dependent) types and (monadic) effects and Z3
;;gdscript ; the language you waited for
;;(go +lsp) ; the hipster dialect
;;(haskell +lsp) ; a language that's lazier than I am
;;hy ; readability of scheme w/ speed of python
;;idris ; a language you can depend on
json ; At least it ain't XML
(java +lsp) ; the poster child for carpal tunnel syndrome
;;javascript ; all(hope(abandon(ye(who(enter(here))))))
;;julia ; a better, faster MATLAB
;;kotlin ; a better, slicker Java(Script)
;;latex ; writing papers in Emacs has never been so fun
;;lean ; for folks with too much to prove
;;ledger ; be audit you can be
;;lua ; one-based indices? one-based indices
markdown ; writing docs for people to ignore
;;nim ; python + lisp at the speed of c
;;nix ; I hereby declare "nix geht mehr!"
;;ocaml ; an objective camel
org ; organize your plain life in plain text
;;php ; perl's insecure younger brother
;;plantuml ; diagrams for confusing people more
;;purescript ; javascript, but functional
python ; beautiful is better than ugly
;;qt ; the 'cutest' gui framework ever
;;racket ; a DSL for DSLs
;;raku ; the artist formerly known as perl6
;;rest ; Emacs as a REST client
;;rst ; ReST in peace
ruby ; 1.step {|i| p "Ruby is #{i.even? ? 'love' : 'life'}"}
;;rust ; Fe2O3.unwrap().unwrap().unwrap().unwrap()
;;scala ; java, but good
;;(scheme +guile) ; a fully conniving family of lisps
sh ; she sells {ba,z,fi}sh shells on the C xor
;;sml
;;solidity ; do you need a blockchain? No.
;;swift ; who asked for emoji variables?
;;terra ; Earth and Moon in alignment for performance.
;;web ; the tubes
yaml ; JSON, but readable
;;zig ; C, but simpler
:email
;;(mu4e +org +gmail)
;;notmuch
;;(wanderlust +gmail)
:app
;;calendar
;;emms
;;everywhere ; *leave* Emacs!? You must be joking
;;irc ; how neckbeards socialize
;;(rss +org) ; emacs as an RSS reader
;;twitter ; twitter client https://twitter.com/vnought
:config
;;literate
(default +bindings +smartparens))

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;; -*- no-byte-compile: t; -*-
;;; $DOOMDIR/packages.el
;; To install a package with Doom you must declare them here and run 'doom sync'
;; on the command line, then restart Emacs for the changes to take effect -- or
;; use 'M-x doom/reload'.
;; To install SOME-PACKAGE from MELPA, ELPA or emacsmirror:
;(package! some-package)
;; To install a package directly from a remote git repo, you must specify a
;; `:recipe'. You'll find documentation on what `:recipe' accepts here:
;; https://github.com/raxod502/straight.el#the-recipe-format
;(package! another-package
; :recipe (:host github :repo "username/repo"))
;; If the package you are trying to install does not contain a PACKAGENAME.el
;; file, or is located in a subdirectory of the repo, you'll need to specify
;; `:files' in the `:recipe':
;(package! this-package
; :recipe (:host github :repo "username/repo"
; :files ("some-file.el" "src/lisp/*.el")))
;; If you'd like to disable a package included with Doom, you can do so here
;; with the `:disable' property:
;(package! builtin-package :disable t)
;; You can override the recipe of a built in package without having to specify
;; all the properties for `:recipe'. These will inherit the rest of its recipe
;; from Doom or MELPA/ELPA/Emacsmirror:
;(package! builtin-package :recipe (:nonrecursive t))
;(package! builtin-package-2 :recipe (:repo "myfork/package"))
;; Specify a `:branch' to install a package from a particular branch or tag.
;; This is required for some packages whose default branch isn't 'master' (which
;; our package manager can't deal with; see raxod502/straight.el#279)
;(package! builtin-package :recipe (:branch "develop"))
;; Use `:pin' to specify a particular commit to install.
;(package! builtin-package :pin "1a2b3c4d5e")
;; Doom's packages are pinned to a specific commit and updated from release to
;; release. The `unpin!' macro allows you to unpin single packages...
;(unpin! pinned-package)
;; ...or multiple packages
;(unpin! pinned-package another-pinned-package)
;; ...Or *all* packages (NOT RECOMMENDED; will likely break things)
;(unpin! t)
(package! org-journal)
(package! all-the-icons-ivy-rich)
(package! git-auto-commit-mode)
;; Testing
(package! dashboard)

7
.emacs
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;; Load all of my config from the org file init.org
(package-initialize)
(require 'org)
(org-babel-load-file (expand-file-name "init.org" user-emacs-directory))

1
.emacs.d Submodule

Submodule .emacs.d added at 2c06577edf

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#+PROPERTY: header-args :results silent
* Overview
This is my personal emacs configuration, which enables my workflow. Highlights include:
- =helm= for completion
- =projectile= for project interaction
- =magit= for an emacs-based =git= porcelain
- =org-mode= for note organization and capture
** Package Manager Bootstrapping
*** Setting Repositories
First, use =package= to set up additional repos, which will be leveraged later.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(require 'package)
(setq package-enable-at-startup nil)
(add-to-list 'package-archives '("melpa" . "https://melpa.org/packages/"))
(add-to-list 'package-archives '("gnu" . "https://elpa.gnu.org/packages/"))
(package-initialize)
#+END_SRC
*** =use-package=
Setup =use-package= and configure it to always install missing
packages. This means that emacs will be slow to boot, as it reaches
out to the network to pull down updated versions. I tend to run emacs
as a daemon, so this doesn't happen too often.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(unless (package-installed-p 'use-package)
(package-refresh-contents)
(package-install 'use-package))
(eval-when-compile
(require 'use-package))
(setq use-package-always-ensure t)
#+END_SRC
** Basic Configuration
Ensure that emacs doesn't add a custom file which will add
configuration that isn't in described this file.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(setq custom-file "/dev/null")
#+END_SRC
Configure some startup parameters.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(line-number-mode t) ;; enable line numbers
(column-number-mode t) ;; enable column numbers
(setq inhibit-splash-screen t) ;; disable the splash screen on boot
(menu-bar-mode 0) ;; disable the menu bar
(tool-bar-mode 0) ;; disable the tool bar
(setq alert-bell-function "ignore")
(if (window-system)
(scroll-bar-mode -1)) ;; disable scroll bars
#+END_SRC
*** Deleting
By default, if you a region selected and hit "backspace" it does not
actually delete the region, which is weird to me. This changes that
behavior.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(setq delete-active-region t)
#+END_SRC
**** ChomeOS
On ChromeOS, M-DEL is mapped to <deletechar>, so remap fix up.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
;; TODO: Figure out how to make this conditional on ChromeOS
(global-set-key (kbd "<deletechar>") 'backward-kill-word)'
#+END_SRC
*** Backups
Enable automatic file saves to a location that won't clutter source
directories.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(savehist-mode t)
(setq backup-directory-alist '(("." . "~/.emacs_backups")))
#+END_SRC
*** Minions Mode (Hide minor modes)
The modeline can get cluttered with lots of minor modes. Use
=minions-mode= to diminish all of the minor modes, and leave room for
more important context like major mode, line number, and git branch.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package minions
:init (minions-mode t))
#+END_SRC
*** Theme
Monokai theme is my theme of choice.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package monokai-theme)
;; This is busted when the font isn't installed (i.e. on MacOS)
;; (set-frame-font "Ubuntu Mono-12" nil t)
#+END_SRC
*** Navigation
Don't use the arrow keys, try to stay on the home row.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(mapc 'global-unset-key '([left] [right] [up] [down] [C-down] [C-up] [C-right] [C-left]))
#+END_SRC
Use zoom-window to enable full-screening a single window, briefly.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package zoom-window
:bind* ("C-c z z" . zoom-window-zoom))
#+END_SRC
=ace-window= makes it easy to jump between windows. I usually have 3+,
so this is nice.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package ace-window
:bind ("C-x o" . ace-window)
:custom
(aw-keys '(?a ?s ?d ?f ?g ?h ?j ?k ?l))
(aw-scope 'frame))
#+END_SRC
=smooth-scrolling= makes emacs scroll nicely and keeps the buffer in a
sane place when the point moves. bottom of the window.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package smooth-scrolling
:config (smooth-scrolling-mode t))
#+END_SRC
*** Replacement
I use replace-string enough to deserve it's own binding.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(global-set-key (kbd "C-c r") 'replace-string)
#+END_SRC
** Org-mode
Org-mode is great. As a format, it's fine- but it's emacs integration is powerful
Enable =org-capture=, which is intended for jotting down quick
notes. I don't use it enough, so I haven't fleshed out useful
templates yet.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package org
:bind (("C-c o c" . org-capture)
("C-c o l" . org-store-link))
:custom (initial-major-mode 'org-mode)
(org-src-tab-acts-natively t)
(org-confirm-babel-evaluate nil)
(org-capture-templates
'(("b" "Bookmark" entry
(file+headline "~/notes/bookmarks.org" "Unsorted")
"* %T %^{Title}\n\n Source: %u, %c\n\n %i")))
:init (org-babel-do-load-languages 'org-babel-load-languages
'((shell . t)
(ruby . t)
(python . t)
(C . t))))
#+END_SRC
*** org-journal
On the other hand, I do use org-journal for notetaking and searching
through my notes.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package org-journal
:bind (("C-c o j c" . org-journal-new-entry)
("C-c o j s" . org-journal-search-forever)))
#+END_SRC
** Development Tools
*** General Emacs
When doing compilation, always jump to the first error to reduce development cycle times.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(setq compilation-auto-jump-to-first-error t)
#+END_SRC
*** Dired
=dired-tree= allows expanding directories in dired buffers. This is
nice for pinning a dired buffer to the side to use as a file browser.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package dired-subtree)
#+END_SRC
=dired= is great, but too detailed by default. Disable
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package dired
:ensure nil
:hook ((dired . dired-hide-details-mode)
(dired . (lambda (toggle-truncate-lines t))))
:bind ([?\t] . dired-subtree-toggle))
#+END_SRC
*** Git (=magit=)
Install magit, the emacs porcelain for git.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package magit
:custom (magit-bury-buffer-function 'magit-mode-quit-window))
#+END_SRC
*** Terminals (=multi-Term=)
Multi-term is useful for having multiple terminal buffers.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package multi-term
:custom
(term-bind-key-alist
'(("C-<backspace>" . term-send-backward-kill-word)
("C-<delete>" . term-send-forward-kill-word)
("C-<left>" . term-send-backward-word)
("C-<right>" . term-send-forward-word)
("C-c C-j" . term-line-mode)
("C-c C-k" . term-char-mode)
("C-c C-c" . term-interrupt-subjob)
("C-r" . term-send-reverse-search-history)
("C-v" . scroll-up)
("C-y" . term-paste)
("C-z" . term-stop-subjob)
("C-p" . term-send-prior)
("C-n" . term-send-next)
("M-p" . scroll-up-line)
("M-n" . scroll-down-line)
("M-DEL" . term-send-backward-kill-word)
("M-d" . term-send-forward-kill-word)
("M-r" . isearch-backward)
("M-s" . term-send-forward-kill-word))))
#+END_SRC
*** File/command completion (=helm=)
Install helm, a completion framework, and install its functions over
some of the usual emacs keybinds.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package helm
:config (helm-mode)
:bind (("M-x" . helm-M-x)
("C-x b" . helm-mini)
("C-x C-b" . helm-buffers-list)
("M-y" . helm-show-kill-ring))
:custom (helm-split-window-inside-p t))
#+END_SRC
=helm-gtags= works nicely for finding tags/references. Though it has
confused me many times, =helm-gtags= does not depend on =ggtags=.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package helm-gtags)
#+END_SRC
=helm-mt= is integrates =multi-term= with helm. It works nicely to
label and search multiple sesions.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package helm-mt
:bind (("C-c t" . helm-mt)))
#+END_SRC
=Helm-projectile= integrates helm with projectile, which makes it very
easy to search for files in a given project.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package helm-projectile
:bind (("C-c p f" . helm-projectile))
:init (add-to-list 'helm-mini-default-sources 'helm-projectile-sources-list)
(helm-projectile-on))
#+END_SRC
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package helm-purpose
:bind (("C-c b" . helm-purpose-switch-buffer-with-purpose)))
#+END_SRC
*** Code completion (=company=)
Company is great for doing completion. It probably deserves more
configuration than I'm giving it.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package company
:init (global-company-mode))
#+END_SRC
*** Projects (=projectile=)
Install projectile for managing buffers within projects.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package projectile
:config (projectile-mode)
:bind (("C-c p c" . projectile-compile-project)
("C-c p t" . projectile-test-project))
:custom (projectil-completion-system 'helm))
#+END_SRC
*** Licenses (=lice=)
=lice= makes it easy to drop the MIT license into all of my code.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package lice
:custom (lice:copyright-holder "Max Regan")
(lice:default-license "mit" "MIT is my default license"))
#+END_SRC
=TODO: Fix this. It seems like this breaks syntax highlighting.=
Use the builtin =hs-minor-mode= to hide the initial comment in code
files- usually its a big license notice.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
;; (add-hook 'prog-mode-hook #'hs-minor-mode)
;; (add-hook 'hs-minor-mode-hook 'hs-hide-initial-comment-block)
#+END_SRC
*** Whitespace (=ws-butler=)
Use =ws-butler= to automatically clean up any trailing whitespace I
leave behind. Other lines are left untouched.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package ws-butler
:config (ws-butler-global-mode t))
#+END_SRC
*** Python (=elpy=)
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(setq python-shell-interpreter "python3")
#+END_SRC
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package elpy
:init (elpy-enable))
#+END_SRC
*** C/C++
TBD
*** Other languages
Add major modes for other languages/filetypes that I work with on occasion.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package yaml-mode)
(use-package markdown-mode)
#+END_SRC
* Uncategorized
C-mode configurations. Set tab width to 4, since that's what I'm used
to.
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(defun my-c-common-hook()
(setq c-hungry-delete-key t)
(setq adaptive-wrap-extra-indent c-basic-offset)
(adaptive-wrap-prefix-mode t)
(toggle-word-wrap t))
(add-hook 'c-mode-common-hook 'my-c-common-hook)
#+END_SRC
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(setq-default c-basic-offset 4
tab-width 4
indent-tabs-mode nil)
#+END_SRC
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(use-package highlight-doxygen
:init (highlight-doxygen-global-mode))
#+END_SRC
Add the ability to toggle a buffer as dedicated to its window, to
prevent other buffers from popping into that window. This comes from
[[https://emacs.stackexchange.com/questions/2189][StackOverflow]].
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(defun toggle-window-dedicated ()
"Control whether or not Emacs is allowed to display another
buffer in current window."
(interactive)
(message
(if (let (window (get-buffer-window (current-buffer)))
(set-window-dedicated-p window (not (window-dedicated-p window))))
"%s is dedicated to the window."
"%s is released from the window.")
(current-buffer)))
(global-set-key (kbd "C-c d") 'toggle-window-dedicated)'
#+END_SRC
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.ino\\'" . c++-mode))
(add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.h\\'" . c++-mode))
#+END_SRC

10
.gitlab-ci.yml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
# You can override the included template(s) by including variable overrides
# See https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/user/application_security/sast/#customizing-the-sast-settings
# Note that environment variables can be set in several places
# See https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/variables/#priority-of-environment-variables
stages:
- test
sast:
stage: test
include:
- template: Security/SAST.gitlab-ci.yml

3
.gitmodules vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
[submodule "doom emacs"]
path = .emacs.d
url = https://github.com/hlissner/doom-emacs

View File

@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ git_root() {
prompt_function() {
prompt=""
HOST_COLOR_ID=$(( "16#$(hostname | md5sum | cut -f1 -d' ')" % 7 + 1)) # [1, 7]
HOST_COLOR_ID=$(( 16#$(hostname | md5sum | cut -f1 -d' ') % 7 + 1)) # [1, 7]
HOST_COLOR="${RST}\001$(tput setaf $HOST_COLOR_ID)\002"
GIT_COLOR="${RST}${FG_CYN}"
DIR_COLOR="${RST}${FG_YEL}"
@@ -56,15 +56,12 @@ prompt_function() {
prompt+="$(whoami)@$(hostname)${RST}:"
if root=$(git_root); then
# If in a git repository, only print the path relative to the repo root
path=$(realpath --relative-to=$root $PWD)
path=$(git rev-parse --show-prefix)
ref=$(git symbolic-ref --short -q HEAD)
if [[ $ref == "" ]]; then
ref="${WARN_COLOR}detached${GIT_COLOR}"
fi
dirty=$(git diff-index --quiet HEAD)
if [[ $path == . ]]; then
path=""
fi
prompt+="${GIT_COLOR}[$(basename $root)@${ref}:${DIR_COLOR}${path}${fg}${GIT_COLOR}]${RST}"
else
# If not in a git repo, print the full path
@@ -76,13 +73,8 @@ prompt_function() {
PS1="\$(prompt_function)"
if [[ -z "$INSIDE_EMACS" ]]; then
EMACS="emacsclient -a="" -c"
alias emacs="$EMACS"
else
EMACS="emacsclient"
alias emacs="$EMACS -n"
fi
export EDITOR="$EMACS"
export VISUAL="$EMACS"
export PATH=$PATH:$HOME/.emacs.d/bin/
export EDITOR="emacs"
export VISUAL="emacs"