Since we move between git chunks with ]h/[h, we may as well
move between git *conflict* chunks (should there be any)
with ]H and [H mirroring the diagnostics/error setup
situation.
With the sunsetting of acousticbrainz I think it is time to
confront reality and remove the plugin. Was a lot of fun to
play around with and create playlists from that followed
music beats, mood or similar but ultimately it slowed down
importing a lot and I never earnestly used it for anything.
Added a profile for having all my screens display something when docked
(when usually the internal screen is turned off)
as well as to *only* display the internal screen even when connected
to the dock (should the need ever arise).
Mimicking my move from master branches to main,
now my overall general library also resides in 'main'
instead of 'master'.
No real visible change, but unifies the wording for
everything.
Unified key bindings roughly to
localleader=, anything with `,` in front will affect the current
documents somehow (e.g. mark them read, add a tag, ..).
jumpto=' prepending with `'` will affect the current view
(e.g. limit to unread documents, limit to entries with notes, ..).
Sorting can be done with `S`, like in vifm.
Display style can be toggled to table with `T`.
Moved my old study library to the more descriptive emgs library
to differentiate from newly added studies under the academia
library.
Both can still be accessed through the main library.
Papis now installed through pipx instead of pacman - reason being that
it allows me to inject plugins only found on github (papis-tui) and also
install my own plugin while they do not exist on the AUR.
Papis reload will now only rebuild the cache of the currently
active library by default. To rebuild the cache of all libraries
papis knows, simply supply the `--all` switch.
Papis show can now show output styled by python-rich if it
is in the environment. Otherwise falls back to normal
console printing.
Added more information to output (journal, volume, issue,
type, doi) but also added `-s` switch which returns to
old single-line behavior for copying to other programs.
Main linking buttons (f/F) *can* be used for this but the resulting
userscript has to account for many more different scenarios than
opening a page.
If it does not, we can not 'click' on text entry fields, dropdowns,
sliders etc with the f-buttons anymore.
This commit switches the qute-gemini script to be invoked via ,g or ,G
thus with the local leader mapping instead.
Code grabbing has been slightly refactored to always check for the
existence of the qutebrowser fifo before sending anything.
Translate has been fixed up a little to use lingva for selection
translations, only falling back to google translate for complete page
translations since I do not think any other services support this for
now.
Now possibly a little less clunky (though still using soon-to-be
deprecated modules), and able to correctly surf gemini/non-gemini pages
as a userscript or as a stand-alone script (simply calling it from
command line).
Works as before for tabbed pages (the clunky rename/symlink way).
Can now also be used as the default way to surf to links so I switched
out my qutebrowser f/F link hinting for this script. Will simply open
links if staying on http but open gemini version as local file if moving
on to gemini.
Could probably be rewritten as an actual plugin to interject itself in
link opening to be a little more elegant (similar to the redirect code I
have running to move to open source web frontends).
Both bookmarkers can now either send the current page ("s for sending to
shaarli; "w to send to wallabag) or send any link on the current page
(;s for shaarli, ;w for wallabag).
Both have been adapted to the same format, both can be sent a link as an
argument as well (./wallabag_add.sh 'myawesome.blog/entry').
Moved the qutebrowser userscript to open recently downloaded files
to be accessible as a normal shell script as well
(`recently-downloaded`).
Mapped this to Super+Shift+D in riverwm to be easily able to open
the most recent downloads from anywhere.
Double the default lines shown to 20.
Blocked hosts reside in a single (giant) plaintext file, which we
now remove from the repository.
Especially with the new blocking sources we grew from around 700k
(which was already a lot at ~35000 lines) to around 5MB which is
just stupid to keep in the git repo if we don't have to.
Since qutebrowser automatically re-creates the file for us on
running `:adblock-update` there's no reason to waste space here.
Micro is out, I have actually never used the editor after first install.
Tectonic is in, a wonderful platform to process LaTeX files with.
Beets gets the plugins I am using injected through pipx.
Vale is out, if we need it on a system we install with nvim mason.
Pipewire-roc is in, wonderful way to stream audio in local networks.
Added simple merge conflict highlighting and resolution through
git-conflict.nvim plugin.
Allows moving to the next/prev conflict with ]x or [x respectively,
then resolving the conflict currently hovered by using ours/theirs/
both/or neither of the offered options (with `ho/hO/hm/hM`
respectively).
Enabled bracketed module of mini.nvim plugin, which enables many
(many!) more bracket jumping options. Some examples are moving
through the bufferlist, comments, files, jumplist, etc with [
and ]. Integrated into whichkey through pre-defined 'desc'
options for each mapping.
Default the option to disable on formatting on save, but add new
key mapping to toggle it on (`<leader>sa`) and off. Still
the remaining issue of files always being 'unsaved' state when
using formatting on save, but this allows quicker toggling for
now.
Removed the test-if-it-exists create-if-not cycle of manual xdg
intervention on every shell startup since it created mostly nothing but
problems so far.
It especially gets in the way of creating network filesystem mappings in
the home folder with hangups, freezes, and blocking automounts whenever
a new shell session is opened.
Added simple highlighting plugin for prose headlines (and code
snippets). Will highlight the whole line a little from the
background and provide more space around it so it stands out.
Currently works (afaik) for markdown, rmd, norg filetypes.
Move from simrats symbols outline which worked very well but had
specific issues for displaying markdown outlines as soon as any
lsp would attach itself to the same buffer.
Aerial seems to not suffer from those issues so this is the one
we will go with for now.
If a locally compiled version of viu exists it will use this for
full image preview display (full-color image). If it does not
exist it will instead fall back to the system viu and use
block-wise display for the preview. Location that local viu is
expected is `~/.local/bin/viu`.
The reason behind this is a bug (or at least unwanted
functionality) in viu which makes it not work correctly from
within vifm. You will have to fix this issue and compile a local
version of viu which vifm assumes to be in the local binary
directory and uses to display the pretty images.