| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
Migrated all 31 cj/custom-keymap registration sites across 24 modules from direct (keymap-set cj/custom-keymap ...) calls to cj/register-prefix-map and cj/register-command. Consumers no longer reference cj/custom-keymap directly, so keybindings.el is the sole owner of the C-; prefix and modules reach it only through the API (each already requires keybindings from Phase 2).
Behavior-preserving: I dumped every C-; binding before and after the migration and they're identical: 279 bindings, each resolving to the same command. The which-key label blocks are untouched, since they use string key descriptions and never assumed the keymap existed. I byte-compiled all 24 files (no new free-variable warnings, because the cj/custom-keymap references are gone), and make test, validate-modules, and an init load all pass.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
Second classification batch: the nine custom-* text/editing command helpers (case, comments, datetime, buffer-file, line-paragraph, misc, ordering, text-enclose, whitespace). I annotated each with the load-graph header contract and added a Batch 2 table to the inventory. They're all Layer 2, eager only to register a C-; submap at load, with no necessary eager reason, so all are Phase 3/4 deferral candidates.
The inventory records a second hidden dependency for Phase 2: custom-buffer-file guards its C-; b registration with (when (boundp 'cj/custom-keymap) ...) and declares the keymap only via eval-when-compile, so the binding silently drops when the module loads without keybindings.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
`make validate-modules` had 19 module-load failures, all the same shape: a module references a symbol or feature owned by another module without saying so. Production was fine because init.el orders requires correctly. The batch target loads each module in isolation, though, and surfaces the gap.
I added explicit `(require 'keybindings)` or `(require 'user-constants)` to each affected module. The requires are idempotent at runtime, so production load order is unchanged. For three optional packages (elpa-mirror, mu4e, org-contacts), I switched to `(require 'X nil t)` so the modules load cleanly when those packages aren't installed. The activation calls become no-ops in that case.
`make validate-modules` now reports 0 failures.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Enhance which-key integration by providing detailed descriptions for
new key bindings across multiple modules. This improves the
usability of custom keymaps by clarifying the purpose of each
keybinding, making it easier for users to navigate and understand
different menus and options available within the configuration.
This update ensures that all custom keymaps now display a
descriptive label in the which-key popup to explain their
functionality, aiding users in identifying keymap purposes promptly.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Introduce a new function `cj/make-buffer-undead` that appends a
buffer name to the `cj/undead-buffer-list`, preventing it from being
killed. This comes along with a suite of tests to check various
scenarios and edge cases for handling undead buffers.
Additionally, add tests for related functions:
`cj/kill-buffer-or-bury-alive`, `cj/kill-buffer-and-window`, and
others to ensure they correctly manage buffers, particularly with
undead-status considerations.
Refactor `undead-buffer-list` naming for consistency and clarity in
the module.
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
Define cj/custom-keymap as a variable to avoid warnings during
compile time.
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
Replaced prefix command setup with defvar-keymap for maintainability.
Enhanced documentation to list interactive commands and customization options.
|
| |
|