| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Seven config-audit findings in mail-config, each verified against the installed mu4e 1.14 source before changing anything:
- The C-; e account nav commands now require mu4e before searching. The maps register eagerly at startup, but mu4e-search has no autoload cookie, so a nav key pressed before mu4e's first launch signaled void-function.
- With msmtp absent, both send variables now get cj/mail--send-mail-unavailable, which signals a user-error naming msmtp. The old fallback left message-send-mail-function nil (the top-level defvar pre-empts message.el's default), so the first send died with "invalid function: nil".
- I removed the unconditional org-msg-edit-mode advice on the two reply commands. org-msg-post-setup already runs on mu4e-compose-mode-hook and applies org-msg-default-alternatives itself, so the advice forced org-msg onto text-only replies and re-ran a major mode org-msg had already set up.
- I dropped the save-attachment headers action: mu4e-view-save-attachments takes no message argument and reads MIME parts from the view buffer, so it never worked from headers.
- I deleted the obsolete HTML view knobs (mu4e-view-prefer-html and both mu4e-html2text-command sets): the shr-based view has ignored them since mu4e 1.7.
- I reordered the contexts so cjennings.net comes first: with pick-first, gmail-first made gmail the silent default account for the first compose.
- I dropped mu4e-starred-folder (not a mu4e variable, never had an effect) and the obsolete mu4e-maildir alias.
New tests cover the nav-command mu4e load and the msmtp-absent fallback.
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I removed the remove-hook shim that swapped the retired popup handler out of a live daemon on module reload. The handler it names was deleted long ago and both daemons have restarted since, so the shim's only remaining effect was a not-known-to-be-defined warning.
I also declared org-capture-mode-map for the compiler (it's only ever touched inside with-eval-after-load) and reflowed one over-wide docstring. The module now byte-compiles with zero warnings.
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The guards from the previous commit landed without tests. I added ten: eviction of a stray live buffer to *scratch*, capture UI spared (*Org Select*, CAPTURE-*), idempotence on a window already showing *scratch*, non-popup frames untouched, nil and non-frame inputs ignored, both hook wrappers' dispatch, and hook registration.
The tests drive the real batch frame instead of mocking frame primitives: they rename it to "org-capture", exercise the guard, and revert to auto-naming. The revert must be nil, not the saved name, because Emacs refuses to set F<num>-shaped names explicitly. window-buffer-change-functions only runs during redisplay, so the module's own hook can't fire mid-test in batch.
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The capture popup frame opens showing the daemon's last buffer, and only the capture UI or the reap-on-finalize hook clears it. When a capture aborts before its UI paints (a C-g, an erroring template, a path that skips cj/quick-capture), the popup lingers on whatever was current. If that was a live eat/vterm terminal, eat sizes the terminal to the small popup window and clamps the real frame to the popup's rows.
Two guards keep the popup from ever holding a size-sensitive live buffer. One on after-make-frame-functions neutralizes the frame at creation, the root cause. One on window-buffer-change-functions catches the abort and stray-switch paths the finalize reap misses. Both repoint any non-capture-UI window to *scratch*, sparing *Org Select* and CAPTURE-* buffers so a live capture is never disturbed.
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tmux 3.7b won't emit sixel until it learns the client's cell pixel size via CSI 14/16/18 t. EAT 0.9.4's parser has no CSI t clause and drops the queries, so images never render. I added a :before advice on eat--t-handle-output that scans the raw output and answers through the terminal's own input function (eat--t-with-env binds eat--t-term). I verified it live: images render and survive window switches, scrolling, and resizing.
I guarded the advice-add so it installs only while EAT itself can't answer. Two answerers give tmux a double reply, and it forwards the second one's raw bytes into the pane as keystrokes. The guard keys on eat--t-send-window-size-report, the function an upstream clause would define.
I kept an upstream-shaped parser-clause patch locally for a PR to akib/emacs-eat.
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calendar-sync--get-exdates read (match-end 0) after split-string, whose internal matching clobbers the match data. The scan position jumped back to a comma offset inside the value and re-matched the same EXDATE line forever, growing the result list until the kernel OOM killer took the whole session down (twice, 2026-07-13). The fix captures the line's end position before the split. The comma-separated tests added with a9e61207 were the first code to hit this path. All 12 exdates tests and all 56 calendar-sync test files now pass in milliseconds.
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org-drill-config hard-coded :load-path to ~/code/org-drill with :demand t, so on a machine without that checkout org-drill failed to load and drill broke. cj/--org-drill-source-keywords now picks the source at load time: :load-path when the checkout exists, a :vc install otherwise. The keyword is spliced through eval, since use-package needs a literal at macro-expansion.
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The buffer-string calendar-sync--fetch-ics had no callers. The sync path uses the temp-file variant exclusively, so 30 lines of curl and sentinel logic that would only drift are gone. I also pulled the fetch-ics-file sentinel's finish logic into calendar-sync--fetch-sentinel-finish so its success, failure, and temp-file-cleanup branches can be tested without a live curl process. The async-worker tests stub the whole fetch and never reached them.
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cj/org-contacts-find visited the contacts file before prompting, so a C-g at the prompt stranded point at the top of it. It then jumped with search-forward, which could land inside another entry's body that mentioned the name. I collect the headings with find-file-noselect first (extracted as cj/--org-contacts-collect), prompt, then jump to the selected heading's stored position. The prompt now requires a match, since a typed non-match has no position to jump to.
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The seven presentation commands were bound with raw global-set-key on "C-; p ..." chains. That only works once keybindings.el has made "C-;" a live prefix. Otherwise each binding errors with "non-prefix key". I replaced them with cj/reveal-map registered under "C-; p" via cj/register-prefix-map, matching every sibling and dropping the load-order dependency.
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cj/flyspell-then-abbrev ran a bare flyspell-buffer guarded by (unless flyspell-mode ...), but nothing turned flyspell-mode on, so the guard never tripped. Every C-' press re-scanned the whole buffer, which is O(buffer) per keypress in large files. I routed the scan through cj/flyspell-on-for-buffer-type instead, so the mode sticks after the first press and the buffer is scanned once.
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cj/lipsum returned nil when the Markov chain was empty (for example with the training file missing), so cj/lipsum-insert ran (insert nil) and raised a cryptic wrong-type error far from the cause. It now signals a user-error naming the fix: train the chain or restore the file.
The Commentary advertised M-x cj/lipsum, but the function had no interactive spec. I added one, echoing the words interactively while still returning the string for cj/lipsum-insert and cj/lipsum-paragraphs.
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user-constants was required only at eval-when-compile, but macros-file lives there and every macro-load path reads it at runtime. The byte-compiled module never pulled user-constants, so it worked only because init.el happens to load user-constants first. An isolated load of the .elc left macros-file unbound. Made it a plain require.
Dropped cj/save-last-kbd-macro-on-exit and its kill-emacs-hook. On a daemon or systemd shutdown the y-or-n-p and name prompt have no one to answer, and M-<f3> already persists named macros, so unnamed throwaways don't need a shutdown gate.
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edit-indirect-region was bound to "M-S-i", but pressing Meta+Shift+i produces the event M-I, not M-S-i. No keypress reached the binding, so it fell through to M-i tab-to-tab-stop. I bound it on "M-I" instead. The "was M-I" comment had it backwards: that earlier rename wasn't a no-op.
accent's C-` used accent-company, which needs the company backend. The pending Company-to-Corfu migration doesn't cover accent, so C-` would break silently once company is gone. I switched to accent-menu, which reads through the minibuffer and works regardless of the completion backend.
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The ox-texinfo block could never run: :defer t with no autoload trigger,
and absent from the dolist that force-requires the other backends. So its
:config never fired, and Texinfo export was unavailable despite the
commentary advertising it. I deleted the block and dropped the Texinfo
line from the commentary. The commentary also claimed subtree default
scope while the code sets 'buffer, so I fixed that too.
I moved org-html-footnote-separator out of org-babel-config, where it sat
as a stray ox-html setting, into ox-html's own :config. ox-html loads
before any HTML export reads the value, so the timing is unchanged.
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org-agenda-timegrid-use-ampm lived in org-roam's :config, so it only took
effect once org-roam loaded at its 1s defer. I moved it into org-agenda's
own :config beside the other agenda display settings, and dropped the
now-unused defvar from org-roam.
I also removed the timeline entry from org-agenda-prefix-format. The
timeline agenda type was removed from org in 9.1, so the entry was inert.
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C-c n p and C-c n w were bound to cj/org-roam-find-node-project and
-webclip, which no use-package :bind autoload could fulfill (they point
at org-roam, which defines neither), so both keys errored with
"autoloading failed to define function". I defined find-node-project as
a sibling of find-node-topic/recipe against the existing project.org
template, and dropped the webclip binding and label since no webclip
template or flow exists.
I repointed the v2mom/recipe/topic capture templates from
.emacs.d/org-roam-templates/ to roam-dir/templates/ so one canonical
directory feeds both the capture templates and the find-node commands.
They had drifted, and edits to one copy never reached the other. Deleted
the now-redundant .emacs.d/org-roam-templates/ files.
I removed the 28-line commented consult-org-roam block. Its proposed
C-c n l / C-c n r collide with live bindings, so it couldn't ship as
written. Git keeps the draft.
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cj/title-case-region contradicted its own docstring in three ways. It lowercased "is" despite the docstring calling linking verbs major words; it never restarted capitalization after a sentence-ending period; and it had no rule to capitalize the last word. I made the code match the standard: dropped "is" from the minor-word skip list, added the period to the reset characters (a period plus a blank restarts, so "3.14" and "foo.bar" are still left alone), and always capitalize the last word by locating its start once. Updated the four characterization tests that asserted the old behavior and added tests for the last-word and period-restart rules.
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cj/indent-lines-in-region-or-buffer used "p\nP", so both COUNT and USE-TABS came from the one prefix argument: no prefix gave count 1 (the docstring's "4" was wrong) with spaces, and any numeric prefix that set the count also forced tabs. Indenting several spaces was unreachable interactively. The prefix argument is now the count (defaulting to 4), and tabs-vs-spaces follows the buffer's indent-tabs-mode. cj/dedent-lines-in-region-or-buffer had the same wrong "default 4" and now defaults its count to 4 too. Added interactive-path tests, since the internals were already covered.
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cj/reverse-lines and cj/number-lines split the region on newlines without accounting for a trailing one, so it became a spurious empty element. Reversing "a\nb\n" floated that empty to the top ("\nb\na"), and numbering added a phantom final numbered line. Both now strip a trailing newline before splitting and reattach it after, matching cj/--arrayify, while preserving internal blank lines. Corrected the two tests that asserted the broken output.
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This module carried three editing bugs.
cj/jump-to-matching-paren, with point on a closing delimiter, ran backward-sexp from there and landed on the last inner sexp instead of the opener. It now steps past the closer first so backward-sexp spans the whole expression, and restores point when the delimiter is unmatched. Four tests that asserted the last-inner-sexp landings are corrected to the true matching opener.
cj/join-line-or-region, without a region, added a newline unconditionally after joining, which left a stray blank line when joining a line in the middle of the buffer. It now adds the newline only at end of buffer.
cj/duplicate-line-or-region duplicated a stray empty line for a region ending at beginning-of-line and split the line for a region ending mid-line. I normalized the bounds to the whole lines the region touches and insert that block once.
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cj/comment-reformat printed "No region was selected" on every call, even successful ones, because the message sat outside the if. Its fill-column shrink used a raw setq and restore, so an error mid-join left fill-column permanently at -3. It now signals a user-error when there's no region and dynamically binds fill-column, which restores itself.
cj/--comment-inline-border sized the right decoration from text-length parity, leaving even-length and empty text two columns short and misaligning stacked dividers. It now fills the exact remaining width. Both fixes ship with tests, and the inline-border test asserts exact width across parities.
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sortable-time-format was 12-hour with AM/PM ("%I:%M:%S %p %Z"), so "01:00:00 PM" sorted before "09:00:00 AM". I switched it to 24-hour "%H:%M:%S %Z", matching sortable-date-time, and updated the test that asserted the AM/PM output.
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cj/copy-link-to-buffer-file did nothing in a non-file buffer, while every sibling copy command signals a user-error. The silent no-op gave no feedback either way. Now it signals a user-error too, and I updated the two tests and the commentary that had documented the silence as intended.
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vertico-sort-function was set to history-alpha, but vertico-prescient-mode owns sorting inside every vertico session and overrode it, so the custom never took effect. I removed it (leaving a note) and kept prescient's frecency sorting, which is the intended behavior.
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A reachability sweep from init.el found eight .el files that nothing in the config loads or references. I moved them under archive/ (off the load-path, still tracked in git) so they stay readable and restorable rather than deleted. archive/README.org records the rule (every .el outside archive/ should be actively used) and why each file was retired.
I retired show-kill-ring, duet-config, and mu4e-org-contacts-setup from modules/, and eplot, profile-dotemacs, titlecase, titlecase-data, and edit-indirect from custom/. Retiring show-kill-ring also removed the orphaned M-K -> M-S-k translation in keyboard-compat, which had left M-K a dead key. Its tests now assert seventeen translations and guard M-K's absence.
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cj/view-email-in-buffer dissected the message into a handle, then signaled a user-error when it found no displayable part, before the mm-destroy-parts cleanup. The handle leaked on every image-only or attachment-only email. Wrap the body in unwind-protect so the handle is always destroyed.
While here, the eager top-level require of mm-decode only fed the mm-handle-type macro at compile time. The viewer already requires mm-decode at runtime before any mm-* call, so I moved it to eval-when-compile plus declare-function (matching the ps-print block above). Opening Emacs no longer loads mm-decode unless you view an email.
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nerd-icons is owned by nerd-icons-config.el (:demand t, plus the dir-color advice and the completion and ibuffer integration). This bare :defer t re-declaration did nothing, so I removed it and its Commentary bullet.
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cj/theme-write-file-contents guarded on file-writable-p, which returns nil when the target's directory doesn't exist. On a fresh machine persist/ isn't there yet, so the theme write failed silently and the choice never persisted. Create the parent directory first, and still return nil if the path isn't writable.
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In a single-window frame cj/kill-other-window killed the buffer being viewed: other-window no-ops, delete-window was guarded, but the kill still ran on the current buffer. Signal a user-error instead, matching the sibling cj/kill-other-window-buffer. Past the guard there's always another window, so delete-window drops its own check.
The single-window test asserted the broken behavior, so I rewrote it to expect the user-error and an untouched buffer.
Also documented the prefix-argument undead-mark in cj/kill-buffer-or-bury-alive.
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emojify-display-style was computed once from env-gui-p inside the :defer'd :config block. In a daemon that block runs before any GUI frame exists, so the style latched to unicode and GUI frames never got image emoji. Recompute it per-frame from server-after-make-frame-hook, mirroring the emoji-fontset setup above.
cj/display-available-fonts called special-mode at the end, leaving the buffer read-only, so the second invocation errored on erase-buffer. Rewrite it under inhibit-read-only.
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Wire the standalone Takuzu (Binairo) game with use-package and require it at
startup so M-x takuzu is available. The package lives in its own repo and loads
by :load-path. Switch to :vc once it is published.
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localrepo-initialize, localrepo--car-member, and the repository-id/priority defcustoms were never called: early-init.el owns adding the local archive to package-archives, with its own localrepo-location constant. The module is now just cj/update-localrepo-repository. It targets localrepo-location, so there's one archive path instead of a divergent copy. The car-member test goes with its subject. A new test pins that the mirror update uses localrepo-location.
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eln-cache
cj/recompile-emacs-home selected native compilation with (boundp 'native-compile-async), but that's a function, so boundp is always nil. The command silently byte-compiled every time, even on native-comp builds. Detection now goes through cj/--native-comp-p, which uses native-comp-available-p. The native cleanup also deleted <dir>/eln, but the real cache is eln-cache/, so a stale cache survived. Both are pinned by tests: a regression on the detection helper, and the cache test now targets eln-cache.
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The arrow-key decodings ran on emacs-startup-hook, but input-decode-map is terminal-local and a daemon's startup hook fires once with no tty. So every emacsclient -t frame opened later missed the decodings, and arrow keys broke in terminal frames. tty-setup-hook runs for each new tty frame, daemon and non-daemon alike. The GUI half already frame-scopes itself. A test pins the hook so a regression back to emacs-startup-hook fails.
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The spec owned the LSP and tree-sitter decisions but still recommended consolidating under prog-lsp. That inverted what shipped: prog-lsp was dead code nothing required, so the fix folded it into prog-general and deleted it. Update the programming target, module table, and ownership note to record prog-general as the sole LSP owner and tree-sitter gated to 'prompt. The keyword stays DOING for the remaining load-graph work.
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prog-lsp.el was required by nothing. The (require 'prog-lsp) line was commented out and later deleted, so none of its config ever ran. prog-general's LSP block was the only policy in effect, which is why the build/cache file-watch ignore list added in April never applied and the "watch all files?" prompt kept firing.
Fold prog-lsp's settings into prog-general and delete the module. This adopts its quiet, performance-first policy. Doc popups, symbol highlighting, snippets, signature help, and modeline diagnostics go off. Idle-delay drops to 0.5, the eldoc provider is stripped from the global hook, and read-process-output-max rises to 1MB. The file-watch ignore list now applies: the daemon carries all thirteen build/cache patterns, six of which lsp-mode already ships by default.
Language-specific server variables and the lsp-deferred mode hooks stay in the per-language modules.
Consolidate the two prog-lsp test files into one test-prog-general-lsp.el: twelve tests covering the file-watch and eldoc helpers across Normal, Boundary, and Error, plus the load-time invariants.
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Four rounds of this bug had one shape: a face nobody enumerated, sitting ahead of a mapped face in a face list and outranking it. A table header renders as (org-table-header org-table), so the mapped org-table underneath never got a say.
So this round adds a test instead of another guess. It fontifies a representative org buffer, collects every face the buffer actually uses (including the line-prefix and wrap-prefix that org-indent hangs its faces on), and fails on anything neither mapped nor deliberately excluded. It caught org-checkbox while I was writing it.
Newly dimmed: org-table-header, org-formula, org-checkbox, org-checkbox-statistics-done, org-headline-done, org-drill-visible-cloze-face.
org-indent joins org-hide and org-superstar-leading on the -hide face. All three resolve to the background colour, which is what makes folded text, leading stars and indent prefixes invisible. Flat-dimming any of them reveals what I hid.
bold, italic and underline stay unmapped on purpose. They carry no foreground even through inheritance, so they take their colour from default and dim for free.
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Bullets were the last thing left lit in an unfocused org window. org-superstar puts its own face ahead of the org face beneath, so a heading star renders as (org-superstar-header-bullet org-level-1) and outranks the org-level-1 we already dim.
Three of its four faces flat-dim. The fourth, org-superstar-leading, takes the -hide face instead: its foreground is the background colour, which is exactly what keeps hidden leading stars invisible. Flat-dimming it would reveal stars I chose to hide. A test says so, so nobody completes the set later.
That closes the dimming work. The parenthesised text from the first report turned out to be org-code and org-verbatim, already covered.
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A doctor that refuses to install anything buys nothing that isn't already there.
Every external binary is guarded at its point of use, with a message that names it: hugo-config guards hugo and the file-manager opener, org-webclipper guards pandoc, org-export-config guards zathura, and ox-pandoc guards itself upstream. Missing packages surface at load or first use. Path checks were the only new capability, and warning about them at startup contradicts the spec's own goal of keeping startup quiet, while an on-demand check nobody remembers to run is worth nothing.
The spec's Problem section rested on a premise nobody verified: that none of these dependencies was checked anywhere. It came from grepping for our own warn helper by name instead of reading the modules for the behavior. The body stays as written with the correction marked, and a postmortem records that the Reuse dimension named the helper that made the feature redundant, then dismissed it in one clause.
No code changed.
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flycheck-ledger registers a ledger checker, but a checker only runs where flycheck-mode is on, and flycheck-mode was hooked to sh-mode and emacs-lisp-mode only. There's no global-flycheck-mode. So an unbalanced transaction in a financial file produced no warning at all, while the ledger module's commentary advertised linting.
The hook goes in flycheck-config, not ledger-config, so that list stays the one answer to "where is flycheck turned on?".
Verified on an unbalanced fixture: flycheck now reports "Transaction does not balance" with the $10.00 remainder, on the right line.
I also accepted the whole-buffer sort the audit flagged. ledger-sort-startkey keys on the ISO date alone, and sort-subr is stable, so a save orders by date and leaves same-day transactions where they were typed. The audit note records both.
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cj/test--do-focus-add-file tested containment with a bare string-prefix-p on two truenames, so tests-old/foo.el passed as being inside tests/ and joined the focus list.
The correct helper was already there. cj/test--file-in-directory-p wraps the directory in file-name-as-directory first, and the other two call sites already used it. This one didn't.
The helper even had a sibling-rejection test. It was proven correct while the call site two hundred lines away never called it, which is why the new test drives the real focus-add path with a tests-old/ directory on disk rather than testing the helper again.
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link and link-visited were absent from auto-dim-other-buffers-affected-faces, so links in help, info, and customize buffers stayed lit while the rest of the window faded. They're distinct from org-link, which the earlier org pass covered.
Both carry :underline t, and the dim face sets no underline, so the relative remap drops the colour and keeps the cue. A second test pins that: if a theme ever gives auto-dim-other-buffers an :underline, dimmed links stop looking like links and the suite says so.
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The linting doesn't run. flycheck-ledger loads and registers the ledger checker, but flycheck-mode is hooked to sh-mode and emacs-lisp-mode only, and there's no global-flycheck-mode. I checked a live ledger-mode buffer: checker registered, flycheck-mode nil. Unbalanced transactions and typo'd account names produce no warning, on a financial file, while the module commentary claims linting.
Three smaller findings. Every save reorders the whole file, because ledger-mode-clean-buffer calls ledger-sort-buffer over point-min to point-max. The demoted error around it lets a save proceed after a partial rewrite, with nothing to roll back. Reconcile has no confirmation and clears whole transactions.
Five characterization tests pin what exists now, including the clean-on-save default the audit questions. I fixed nothing: the guardrail choices are a separate task, and only the flycheck gap is a defect rather than a preference.
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The mechanical half of the "?" convention task. I probed ten modes from their live keymaps rather than from source, because a package's define-key calls don't always agree with what lands in the map.
Four modes have both ? and H free, so nov, eat, and the two elfeed modes can adopt the convention without displacing anything. Three bind ? to something small that adopting it would displace. mu4e-headers is the one real conflict: its ? marks mail unread, a state-mutating command in the marking family.
magit already binds ? to its own dispatch. The convention isn't new, it's magit's habit generalized.
I ran the probe in a throwaway batch Emacs rather than the daemon, since probing calibredb and mu4e in a live session would force-load them. mu4e isn't an ELPA package and needed its site-lisp path.
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Sixteen modules make up the Org workflow, and nothing wrote down which owns what. Answering "who sets this variable?" meant grepping. The note maps each module to its behavior, the shared variables with more than one writer, and the init.el load order.
The load-boundary facts are the useful part. Four modules append to org-capture-templates, four touch org-agenda-files, and five register org-protocol handlers. quick-video-capture loads twenty-four lines before org-config because it's grouped with the media modules. Every Org module loads eagerly, including the five its own headers call optional.
I recorded four follow-ups in the note instead of fixing them: a tracked .bak file under modules/, a missing header on the agenda debug module, no collision check on org-protocol handlers, and that eager loading.
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