In the interest of slimming down Doom's core (as we near v3), I've
deprecated these macros. They doesn't really need to exist. Sure, the
alternatives aren't as ergonomic or elegant, but they're good enough
that we don't need these trivial wrappers. Their local uses have been
refactored out as well.
BREAKING CHANGE: This removes the pcre2el package, which Doom was using
solely for one function to escape PCREs. In the interest of thinning out
Doom's core, I've hoisted a simpler version of the function into Doom's
stdlib so I can remove the dependency.
BREAKING CHANGE: This commit replaces all-the-icons with nerd-fonts. Any
all-the-icons-* function calls or variable references in your private
config will break and should be replaced with their nerd-icons-*
equivalent. That said, Doom will continue to install all-the-icons for
a while, so feel free to load it if you don't want to fully commit to
the change yet.
This change is happening because nerd-icon has wider support for GUI and
TUI Emacs; has a larger, more consistent selection of symbols; plus unicode
coverage.
Fix: #7368Close: #6675Close: #7364
featurep! will be renamed modulep! in the future, so it's been
deprecated. They have identical interfaces, and can be replaced without
issue.
featurep! was never quite the right name for this macro. It implied that
it had some connection to featurep, which it doesn't (only that it was
similar in purpose; still, Doom modules are not features). To undo such
implications and be consistent with its namespace (and since we're
heading into a storm of breaking changes with the v3 release anyway),
now was the best opportunity to begin the transition.
Perhaps less useful to rg vets, but less scary for beginners. That said,
the default rg arguments aren't particularly interesting or surprising
that they need to be announced.
We're focusing on ripgrep so we can iterate on search functionality in
Doom quicker. There is nothing the other search backends can do that
ripgrep can't. It is now a hard dependency for Doom.
I'm reducing the scope of our project search so we can eventually focus
on ripgrep. By specializing I can extend Doom's features for project
searching.
Uses the most basic, uncustomized shell to a) prevent interference
caused by slow shell configs and b) speed up project text searches. This
comes at the cost of isolating these programs from envvars that the user
may have set in their shell configs in order to change
ag/rg/pt/git-grep/grep's behavior.
If this bothers you, change +ivy-file-search-shell to your shell (or
to the value of `shell-file-name`).
Possibly relevant to an issue mentioned in #1260