- Add the ‘dunst’, ‘zsh’, ‘mcron’, and ‘mbsync’ modules.
- Tell Make that any ‘*.el’ files ar “precious”, meaning that when a ‘.elc’ file
was generated from a ‘.el’ file that was itself generated from a ‘.org’ file,
the ‘.el’ file isn't just an intermediate file and should not be deleted.
- Change the ‘install’ and ‘clean’ to use the ‘*-stow’ and ‘*-clean’ rules set
up for each module.
- Add configuration for ‘outline-minor-mode’ and change the headings to adhere
to that configuration.
- Stop using the ‘build/’ directory, tangle all the files to the same directory
as the source files, and use stow, not cp, to install them. The only exception
is the XDG files, which now have their specific ‘xdg-stow’ rule. This is
necessary because programs using these files will overwrite a symbolic link
they find and replace it with a new file, overwriting my settings.
- Add some files that were missing, and rename some files to follow the existing
convention to make them easy to tangle.
Add a ‘wm.target’ file that services can hook into and that Herbstluftwm starts
at the end of its startup script. This way different services can be sure that
the window manager itself has started up, and can be dependent on one another.
Hopefully this makes managing these background processes easier.
- Remove _some_ unused variables.
- Fix the font, height, and padding for the bar itself, and the modules inside.
- Remove the monitor, I always only have one now.
Instead of using my custom Python script that looks them up, just use the
command-line application included in the ‘libsecret’ package on Archlinux.
Remove the custom helper script that I’d written for them.
Folding means that if stow discovers a parent directory for a project or a file
in it exists, it doesn’t create the directory structure and then links the file,
instead it makes a symbolic link between the directory.
This means that any files created in that directory show up in this repository.
The upside of that situation is that if I remove or rename files, and the
directory it’s in is folded, it doesn’t leave dead links around.
I’m very used to having M-up and M-down do the same thing as regular up and
down. In fish by default this prints the previous command, with ‘&| less;’ added
on.