Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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A bunch of shellish ops, but seems to be working fine.
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Useless there right now, but Emacs package engine is going to use
them.
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Setting next version's value in the Git repos, so that people can have
both unstable and stable versions in their systems.
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Racket is returning by default their canonical "rkt" name, which
sometimes is not what's in the filesystem.
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Resolved module path can now be, besides symbols, a list representing
a submodule. When deciding whether what we are loading in enter's
current loader is a module or not, we have now to take that bit into
account.
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In geiser-racket.sh, there's the new option -n, which uses a new
hostname argument accepted by geiser/user's start-geiser function.
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By listing it in the corresponding Makefile.am file. I wonder how
useful maintaining all this autofoo stuff really is: creating an ELPA
package could be more handy for people not using the git repo
directly, and much easier to maintain.
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... in preparation for 0.2.
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Images rendered via put-image won't be deleted by
erase-buffer (they're overlays), while those inserted by
insert-image (text properties) will.
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When geiser-repl-inline-images-p is false (or we're in a terminal),
the inserted text replacement is a button that calls the external
viewer on click. There's also a parameter controlling whether the
viewer should be invoked automatically upon insertion.
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Conflicts:
elisp/geiser-racket.el
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When no cache dir is set in the emacs customization, we ask Racket for
the one that it's using by default.
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When no cache dir is set in the emacs customization, we ask Racket for
the one that it's using by default.
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Brought to you by a comma-command in the REPL and the REPL startup
function.
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Emacs now remembers the directory that Racket put the last image in.
It leaves up to 10 previously viewed images in this directory,
providing an 'image history'.
This also reduces memory requirements; emacs no longer reads image
content into memory.
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they are displayed in the REPL.
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On the racket side, we use a custom print handler to print
images (convertible? values; see file/convertible) in a special format:
#<Image: filename>
On the geiser side, we add a comint post-output hook to search for
that filename and replace it with inline images.
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This one probably requires Racket 5.3, and incorporates some
parameterization to the module compilation and evaluation code in
Geiser's version of enter.rkt. I'm mostly mirroring what the latter
does, and i'm probably not completely understanding all corner cases,
so the two users of Geiser should keep an eye open for possible
breakage introduced by this patch.
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Just adjusting a regexp.
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In my debian machine, the info nodes for guile live in the "guile-2.0"
node, rather than plain "guile". A new customizable variable,
geiser-guile-manual-lookup-nodes, lets now specify additional names,
and we only add indexes to the info-lookup mode definition when the
node actually exists.
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We had only for two of them, and one was wrong!
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That is, `else' gets keyword fontlocking. Undecided as to whether
extend this highlighting to all schemes...
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It's not perfect and undocumented, but useful nonetheless.
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We were not re-activating it on new input, cause we weren't detecting
the prompt unless preceeded by other output (and, hence, a newline).
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Hat tip Marijn.
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This bugs was exposed by using rackunit, where all the output of, say,
check-eq? was lost for good (it was being sent to the stderr black
hole).
Hat tip Grant Retkke.
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We were not checking that the region sent to the scheme process was
balanced, resulting in said process waiting for ever on `read' (or its
moral equivalent in our current implementation). We now just refuse
to evaluate an improper region in the first place.
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At some point, we should make indentation rules buffer-local.
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Seems like the add-on package filladapt.el is broken in that its
version of fill-adapt uses a non-optional first argument. Aquamacs
users were filling the pain. Fixed by passing nil in our call to
fill-paragraph. Hat tip Jonathan Oddie.
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We were just ignoring it so far!
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