In the previous configuration the dependency on `ivy-pass` added a
second version of ivy to the load-path.
It is fixed by manually pinning ivy and its related packages and using
those to build ivy-pass.
This configuration should be temporary until the next time the MELPA
package set is updated in nixpkgs.
This caused the symptoms in raxod502/prescient.el#10
Stores the unstable channel in the global package set to make it
available in the emacs module.
All emacs-related packages are now taken from the unstable channel.
Related changes:
* prescient is now built directly from git
* sly has been (temporarily) removed because the MELPA recipe is
failing
Unfortunately the version bumps to prescient and ivy (& its related
packages) don't seem to help with raxod502/prescient.el#10
Implements a periodically updated telephone-line segment that displays
the current unread count for the two most important inboxes in the
mode-line, if there are unread mails.
Telephone line has a slightly easier to configure segment system. This
commit also uses the commit introduced in the previous function to
conditionally display miscellaneous modeline information in the last
window of a frame.
More configuration for this will come over time.
Adds a function that can be used to check whether the current buffer
is displayed in the "last" window of the active frame.
The intention is to use this predicate to modify the modeline display
to only show miscellaneous information (time, battery percentage etc.)
on the last window instead of duplicating it.
Ivy's regex-based fuzzy matching can occasionally be slow, which was
getting on my nerves.
This switches the completion engine to prescient[1] which promises to
be faster. Experimental testing in large files like the
`configuration.nix` man page looks promissing.
[1]: https://github.com/raxod502/prescient.el
These packages are not in nixpkgs yet (will most likely be added after
the next MELPA import), so they're added here manually.
As both originate from the same source they're added to the same
derivation here by using a custom recipe.