2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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# Configuration
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2020-09-16 09:07:08 +03:00
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## User Interface
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Historically Prelude had adopted a very minimalistic approach to UI and
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had hidden by default Emacs's menu bar and tool bar. This was changed a bit
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in Prelude 1.1 for the sake of being more approachable to newcomers to Emacs
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and now the menu bar is displayed by default. The tool bar is still hidden, as
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it's quite big and not that useful.
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!!! Tip
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You can toggle the menu bar by pressing `F12`.
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Furthermore, Prelude 1.1 displays line numbers (via `global-nlinum-mode`), just
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like most "modern" editors and IDEs do these days. You can go back to the way
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things were by setting `prelude-minimalistic-ui` to `t` in `personal/preload` or
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by adding the following snippets to your personal config:
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``` emacs-lisp
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(global-nlinum-mode -1)
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(menu-bar-mode -1)
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```
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!!! Note
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The first approach is better as it would prevent those UI elements from
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appearing temporarily.
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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## Color Themes
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Emacs provides a dozen of
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built-in themes you can use out-of-the-box by invoking the `M-x
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load-theme` command.
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[Zenburn](https://github.com/bbatsov/zenburn-emacs) is the default
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color theme in Prelude, but you can change it at your discretion. Why
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Zenburn? I (and lots of hackers around the world) find it pretty neat
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for some reason. Personally I find the default theme pretty tiresome
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for the eyes, that's why I took that "controversial" decision to
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replace it. You can, of course, easily go back to the default (or
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select another theme entirely).
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To disable Zenburn just put in your personal config the following
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line:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(disable-theme 'zenburn)
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```
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Or you can use another theme altogether by adding something in `personal/preload` like:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(setq prelude-theme 'tango)
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```
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2019-01-16 15:16:17 +02:00
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!!! Note
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To use a non-built-in theme, like [Solarized](https://github.com/bbatsov/solarized-emacs),
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you'll have to install it from MELPA first by `M-x package-install RET solarized-theme`. Then add
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(setq prelude-theme 'solarized-dark)
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```
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in `personal/preload`.
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Finally, if you don't want any theme at all, you can add this to your
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`personal/preload`:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(setq prelude-theme nil)
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```
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## Personalizing
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All files you create under the `personal/` directory are yours for
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personalization. There is no single special personal config file --
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any files you create in the `personal/` directory will be loaded in
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lexicographical order. The overall loading precedence is:
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1. `personal/preload/*`
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2. `core/`
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2019-01-16 15:16:17 +02:00
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3. `personal/prelude-modules.el` (or deprecated `prelude-modules.el`)
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4. `personal/*`
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2020-09-03 09:08:56 +03:00
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### Personalization Example
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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Suppose you want to configure `go-mode` to autoformat on each save. You
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can create a file in `personal/`, let's call this one
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`config-go-mode.el` and add the following to it.
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(add-hook 'go-mode-hook
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(lambda ()
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(add-hook 'before-save-hook 'gofmt-before-save)
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(setq tab-width 2)))
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```
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2020-09-03 09:08:56 +03:00
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### General Tips
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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**Fork** (instead of cloning) the official Prelude repo and add your
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own touch to it. You're advised to **avoid changing stuff outside of
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the personal folder** to avoid having to deal with git merge conflicts
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in the future.
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If you'd like to add some auto installation of packages in your
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personal config use the following code:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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(prelude-require-packages '(some-package some-other-package))
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```
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If you require just a single package you can also use:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(prelude-require-package 'some-package)
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```
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### Preloading personal config
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Sometimes you might want to load code before Prelude has started loading. Prelude will automatically preload all
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Emacs Lisp files in your `personal/preload` directory. Note that at this point you can't using anything from
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Prelude, except a few variables like `prelude-dir`, etc (since nothing is yet loaded).
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### Disabling whitespace-mode
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Although `whitespace-mode` is awesome, some people might find it too
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intrusive. You can disable it in your
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personal config with the following bit of code:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(setq prelude-whitespace nil)
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```
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If you like `whitespace-mode`, but prefer it to not automatically
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cleanup your file on save, you can disable that behavior by setting
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`prelude-clean-whitespace-on-save` to `nil` in your config file with:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(setq prelude-clean-whitespace-on-save nil)
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```
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### Disable flyspell-mode
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If you're not fond of spellchecking on the fly:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2019-01-16 14:31:52 +02:00
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(setq prelude-flyspell nil)
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```
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2020-04-09 09:58:07 +03:00
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### Disable automatic formatting on save
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If you prefer not to automatically format your file on save, you can disable that behavior by setting
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`prelude-format-on-save` to `nil` in your config file with:
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2020-04-16 16:59:21 +03:00
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```emacs-lisp
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2020-04-09 09:58:07 +03:00
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(setq prelude-format-on-save nil)
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```
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Currently this only affects automated formatting of Typescript files.
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2020-09-16 09:14:21 +03:00
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### Disable Super-based keybindings
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Out-of-the-box Prelude will create two versions of many keybindings in `prelude-mode`:
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* One "traditional" version with a prefix like `Control`
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* One "alternative" version with a prefix like `Super`
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The reason for this is that there are generally more options for short keybindings with `Super` - e.g. you can
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have `s-p`, `s-g`, etc. There's, however, a problem lying here as well - some operating systems and
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desktop environments might be making heavy use of such keybindings. (in most cases those would intercept them before Emacs does).
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`exwm` also uses those heavily. You prevent Prelude from creating such keybindings via `prelude-super-keybindings`:
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```emacs-lisp
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(setq prelude-super-keybindings nil)
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```
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2020-04-09 09:58:07 +03:00
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### Configuration per file or directory
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2020-09-16 09:14:21 +03:00
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Some of these settings (those that don't need to be pre-loaded) can also be set
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on a per-file or directory basis by using a file local variable or a
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`.dir-locals.el` file.
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