This reverts commit 961651e575.
It works in an interactive session, but still fails while starting up. Probably
has to do with autoloads not having finished loading yet, perhaps?
This macro seems to work fine when expanded at run-time even when ‘consult’
hasn't been loaded, but it doesn't work after it's been byte-compiled... Perhaps
putting it in the top-level will help. I'm wondering if somehow the byte
compiler closes over a reference to ‘consult-buffer’ during compilation that's
not available when it executes?
I'm having some issues with my ‘consult-buffer’ setup and I'm hoping that
putting this in its own function will help me debug the issue, or at least show
me if this is part of the issue or not.
The various ‘M-<NUMBER>’ keybindings are all also bound to ‘C-<NUMBER>’, no need
to have both, and using ‘M-0’ is a lot easier than using ‘C-x 0’. This also
replaces the old keybindings with a message that tells me to use the new
keybindings instead to help me learn.
There are some programs that live in both that and some other directories that
I've added on Windows. This makes sure that the cygwin ones don't overwrite
everything else, since usually I use different versions like MSYS2.
This also brings in marginalia, orderless, consult, and embark.
I've been reading about these projects for a while and after some looking around
it seems like these are at the very least interesting, I'm trying it out for a
while.
I'm so used to using it that I keep forgetting to use ‘M-o’ for ‘ace-window’
instead. By disabling this keybinding I can train myself to use ‘ace-window’.
The big downside of usuing these cookies to inject my configuration into the
loading of a package is that it means that I can't load that package without my
configuration anymore. This means that when I start ‘emacs -Q’ and then call
‘package-initialize’ it'll load my configuration as well. This makes debugging
things very difficult.
- Inhibit the use of the ’ character in case a ' should be used so that spell
checking programs don't get confused.
- Explicitly use the ‘hunspell’ program to perform spell checking.