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authorVidhu Kant Sharma <vidhukant@protonmail.ch>2021-10-15 15:18:13 +0530
committerVidhu Kant Sharma <vidhukant@protonmail.ch>2021-10-15 15:18:13 +0530
commit4041b53a532ff59489071562dcca3c672ac3e292 (patch)
tree809514a8fd57b96f85ef8abdc907b14599e056ce /.doom.d
parenta1d475259a59eba4a86f541a9af2f2cd96d126cb (diff)
removing KDE and other files due to errors
Diffstat (limited to '.doom.d')
-rw-r--r--.doom.d/config.el54
-rw-r--r--.doom.d/init.el188
-rw-r--r--.doom.d/packages.el54
3 files changed, 0 insertions, 296 deletions
diff --git a/.doom.d/config.el b/.doom.d/config.el
deleted file mode 100644
index 784f16d..0000000
--- a/.doom.d/config.el
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,54 +0,0 @@
-;;; $DOOMDIR/config.el -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
-
-;; Place your private configuration here! Remember, you do not need to run 'doom
-;; sync' after modifying this file!
-
-
-;; Some functionality uses this to identify you, e.g. GPG configuration, email
-;; clients, file templates and snippets.
-(setq user-full-name "Vidhu Kant Sharma"
- user-mail-address "bokuwakanojogahoshii@yahoo.com")
-
-;; Doom exposes five (optional) variables for controlling fonts in Doom. Here
-;; are the three important ones:
-;;
-;; + `doom-font'
-;; + `doom-variable-pitch-font'
-;; + `doom-big-font' -- used for `doom-big-font-mode'; use this for
-;; presentations or streaming.
-;;
-;; They all accept either a font-spec, font string ("Input Mono-12"), or xlfd
-;; font string. You generally only need these two:
-(setq doom-font (font-spec :family "Source Code Pro" :size 16 :weight 'semi-light)
- doom-variable-pitch-font (font-spec :family "Source Code Pro" :size 17))
-
-;; There are two ways to load a theme. Both assume the theme is installed and
-;; available. You can either set `doom-theme' or manually load a theme with the
-;; `load-theme' function. This is the default:
-(setq doom-theme 'doom-one)
-
-;; If you use `org' and don't want your org files in the default location below,
-;; change `org-directory'. It must be set before org loads!
-(setq org-directory "~/org/")
-
-;; This determines the style of line numbers in effect. If set to `nil', line
-;; numbers are disabled. For relative line numbers, set this to `relative'.
-(setq display-line-numbers-type t)
-
-
-;; Here are some additional functions/macros that could help you configure Doom:
-;;
-;; - `load!' for loading external *.el files relative to this one
-;; - `use-package!' for configuring packages
-;; - `after!' for running code after a package has loaded
-;; - `add-load-path!' for adding directories to the `load-path', relative to
-;; this file. Emacs searches the `load-path' when you load packages with
-;; `require' or `use-package'.
-;; - `map!' for binding new keys
-;;
-;; To get information about any of these functions/macros, move the cursor over
-;; the highlighted symbol at press 'K' (non-evil users must press 'C-c c k').
-;; This will open documentation for it, including demos of how they are used.
-;;
-;; You can also try 'gd' (or 'C-c c d') to jump to their definition and see how
-;; they are implemented.
diff --git a/.doom.d/init.el b/.doom.d/init.el
deleted file mode 100644
index be4be49..0000000
--- a/.doom.d/init.el
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,188 +0,0 @@
-;;; init.el -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
-
-;; This file controls what Doom modules are enabled and what order they load
-;; in. Remember to run 'doom sync' after modifying it!
-
-;; NOTE Press 'SPC h d h' (or 'C-h d h' for non-vim users) to access Doom's
-;; documentation. There you'll find a "Module Index" link where you'll find
-;; a comprehensive list of Doom's modules and what flags they support.
-
-;; NOTE Move your cursor over a module's name (or its flags) and press 'K' (or
-;; 'C-c c k' for non-vim users) to view its documentation. This works on
-;; flags as well (those symbols that start with a plus).
-;;
-;; Alternatively, press 'gd' (or 'C-c c d') on a module to browse its
-;; directory (for easy access to its source code).
-
-(doom! :input
- ;;chinese
- ;;japanese
- ;;layout ; auie,ctsrnm is the superior home row
-
- :completion
- company ; the ultimate code completion backend
- ;;helm ; the *other* search engine for love and life
- ;;ido ; the other *other* search engine...
- ivy ; a search engine for love and life
-
- :ui
- ;;deft ; notational velocity for Emacs
- doom ; what makes DOOM look the way it does
- doom-dashboard ; a nifty splash screen for Emacs
- doom-quit ; DOOM quit-message prompts when you quit Emacs
- ;;(emoji +unicode) ; 🙂
- ;;fill-column ; a `fill-column' indicator
- hl-todo ; highlight TODO/FIXME/NOTE/DEPRECATED/HACK/REVIEW
- ;;hydra
- indent-guides ; highlighted indent columns
- ;;ligatures ; ligatures and symbols to make your code pretty again
- minimap ; show a map of the code on the side
- modeline ; snazzy, Atom-inspired modeline, plus API
- nav-flash ; blink cursor line after big motions
- ;;neotree ; a project drawer, like NERDTree for vim
- ophints ; highlight the region an operation acts on
- (popup +defaults) ; tame sudden yet inevitable temporary windows
- ;;tabs ; a tab bar for Emacs
- ;;treemacs ; a project drawer, like neotree but cooler
- ;;unicode ; extended unicode support for various languages
- vc-gutter ; vcs diff in the fringe
- vi-tilde-fringe ; fringe tildes to mark beyond EOB
- ;;window-select ; visually switch windows
- workspaces ; tab emulation, persistence & separate workspaces
- ;;zen ; distraction-free coding or writing
-
- :editor
- (evil +everywhere); come to the dark side, we have cookies
- file-templates ; auto-snippets for empty files
- fold ; (nigh) universal code folding
- ;;(format +onsave) ; automated prettiness
- ;;god ; run Emacs commands without modifier keys
- ;;lispy ; vim for lisp, for people who don't like vim
- ;;multiple-cursors ; editing in many places at once
- ;;objed ; text object editing for the innocent
- ;;parinfer ; turn lisp into python, sort of
- ;;rotate-text ; cycle region at point between text candidates
- snippets ; my elves. They type so I don't have to
- ;;word-wrap ; soft wrapping with language-aware indent
-
- :emacs
- dired ; making dired pretty [functional]
- electric ; smarter, keyword-based electric-indent
- ;;ibuffer ; interactive buffer management
- undo ; persistent, smarter undo for your inevitable mistakes
- vc ; version-control and Emacs, sitting in a tree
-
- :term
- ;;eshell ; the elisp shell that works everywhere
- ;;shell ; simple shell REPL for Emacs
- ;;term ; basic terminal emulator for Emacs
- vterm ; the best terminal emulation in Emacs
-
- :checkers
- syntax ; tasing you for every semicolon you forget
- ;;(spell +flyspell) ; tasing you for misspelling mispelling
- ;;grammar ; tasing grammar mistake every you make
-
- :tools
- ;;ansible
- ;;debugger ; FIXME stepping through code, to help you add bugs
- ;;direnv
- ;;docker
- ;;editorconfig ; let someone else argue about tabs vs spaces
- ;;ein ; tame Jupyter notebooks with emacs
- (eval +overlay) ; run code, run (also, repls)
- ;;gist ; interacting with github gists
- lookup ; navigate your code and its documentation
- lsp
- magit ; a git porcelain for Emacs
- make ; run make tasks from Emacs
- ;;pass ; password manager for nerds
- ;;pdf ; pdf enhancements
- ;;prodigy ; FIXME managing external services & code builders
- ;;rgb ; creating color strings
- ;;taskrunner ; taskrunner for all your projects
- ;;terraform ; infrastructure as code
- ;;tmux ; an API for interacting with tmux
- ;;upload ; map local to remote projects via ssh/ftp
-
- :os
- (:if IS-MAC macos) ; improve compatibility with macOS
- ;;tty ; improve the terminal Emacs experience
-
- :lang
- ;;agda ; types of types of types of types...
- ;;beancount ; mind the GAAP
- ;;cc ; C > C++ == 1
- ;;clojure ; java with a lisp
- ;;common-lisp ; if you've seen one lisp, you've seen them all
- ;;coq ; proofs-as-programs
- ;;crystal ; ruby at the speed of c
- ;;csharp ; unity, .NET, and mono shenanigans
- ;;data ; config/data formats
- ;;(dart +flutter) ; paint ui and not much else
- ;;elixir ; erlang done right
- ;;elm ; care for a cup of TEA?
- emacs-lisp ; drown in parentheses
- ;;erlang ; an elegant language for a more civilized age
- ;;ess ; emacs speaks statistics
- ;;factor
- ;;faust ; dsp, but you get to keep your soul
- ;;fsharp ; ML stands for Microsoft's Language
- ;;fstar ; (dependent) types and (monadic) effects and Z3
- ;;gdscript ; the language you waited for
- ;;(go +lsp) ; the hipster dialect
- ;;(haskell +dante) ; a language that's lazier than I am
- ;;hy ; readability of scheme w/ speed of python
- ;;idris ; a language you can depend on
- json ; At least it ain't XML
- ;;(java +meghanada) ; the poster child for carpal tunnel syndrome
- javascript ; all(hope(abandon(ye(who(enter(here))))))
- ;;julia ; a better, faster MATLAB
- ;;kotlin ; a better, slicker Java(Script)
- ;;latex ; writing papers in Emacs has never been so fun
- ;;lean ; for folks with too much to prove
- ;;ledger ; be audit you can be
- ;;lua ; one-based indices? one-based indices
- markdown ; writing docs for people to ignore
- ;;nim ; python + lisp at the speed of c
- ;;nix ; I hereby declare "nix geht mehr!"
- ;;ocaml ; an objective camel
- org ; organize your plain life in plain text
- ;;php ; perl's insecure younger brother
- ;;plantuml ; diagrams for confusing people more
- ;;purescript ; javascript, but functional
- ;;python ; beautiful is better than ugly
- ;;qt ; the 'cutest' gui framework ever
- ;;racket ; a DSL for DSLs
- ;;raku ; the artist formerly known as perl6
- ;;rest ; Emacs as a REST client
- ;;rst ; ReST in peace
- ;;(ruby +rails) ; 1.step {|i| p "Ruby is #{i.even? ? 'love' : 'life'}"}
- ;;rust ; Fe2O3.unwrap().unwrap().unwrap().unwrap()
- ;;scala ; java, but good
- ;;(scheme +guile) ; a fully conniving family of lisps
- sh ; she sells {ba,z,fi}sh shells on the C xor
- ;;sml
- ;;solidity ; do you need a blockchain? No.
- ;;swift ; who asked for emoji variables?
- ;;terra ; Earth and Moon in alignment for performance.
- web ; the tubes
- ;;yaml ; JSON, but readable
- ;;zig ; C, but simpler
-
- :email
- ;;(mu4e +gmail)
- ;;notmuch
- ;;(wanderlust +gmail)
-
- :app
- ;;calendar
- ;;emms
- ;;everywhere ; *leave* Emacs!? You must be joking
- ;;irc ; how neckbeards socialize
- ;;(rss +org) ; emacs as an RSS reader
- ;;twitter ; twitter client https://twitter.com/vnought
-
- :config
- ;;literate
- (default +bindings +smartparens))
diff --git a/.doom.d/packages.el b/.doom.d/packages.el
deleted file mode 100644
index 8407f42..0000000
--- a/.doom.d/packages.el
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,54 +0,0 @@
-;; -*- no-byte-compile: t; -*-
-;;; $DOOMDIR/packages.el
-
-;; To install a package with Doom you must declare them here and run 'doom sync'
-;; on the command line, then restart Emacs for the changes to take effect -- or
-;; use 'M-x doom/reload'.
-
-
-;; To install SOME-PACKAGE from MELPA, ELPA or emacsmirror:
-;(package! some-package)
-
-;; To install a package directly from a remote git repo, you must specify a
-;; `:recipe'. You'll find documentation on what `:recipe' accepts here:
-;; https://github.com/raxod502/straight.el#the-recipe-format
-;(package! another-package
-; :recipe (:host github :repo "username/repo"))
-
-;; If the package you are trying to install does not contain a PACKAGENAME.el
-;; file, or is located in a subdirectory of the repo, you'll need to specify
-;; `:files' in the `:recipe':
-;(package! this-package
-; :recipe (:host github :repo "username/repo"
-; :files ("some-file.el" "src/lisp/*.el")))
-
-;; If you'd like to disable a package included with Doom, you can do so here
-;; with the `:disable' property:
-;(package! builtin-package :disable t)
-
-;; You can override the recipe of a built in package without having to specify
-;; all the properties for `:recipe'. These will inherit the rest of its recipe
-;; from Doom or MELPA/ELPA/Emacsmirror:
-;(package! builtin-package :recipe (:nonrecursive t))
-;(package! builtin-package-2 :recipe (:repo "myfork/package"))
-
-;; Specify a `:branch' to install a package from a particular branch or tag.
-;; This is required for some packages whose default branch isn't 'master' (which
-;; our package manager can't deal with; see raxod502/straight.el#279)
-;(package! builtin-package :recipe (:branch "develop"))
-
-;; Use `:pin' to specify a particular commit to install.
-;(package! builtin-package :pin "1a2b3c4d5e")
-
-
-;; Doom's packages are pinned to a specific commit and updated from release to
-;; release. The `unpin!' macro allows you to unpin single packages...
-;(unpin! pinned-package)
-;; ...or multiple packages
-;(unpin! pinned-package another-pinned-package)
-;; ...Or *all* packages (NOT RECOMMENDED; will likely break things)
-;(unpin! t)
-
-;; (require 'go-autocomplete)
-;; (require 'auto-complete-config)
-;; (ac-config-default)