-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
config.el
75 lines (59 loc) · 3.12 KB
/
config.el
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
;;Key Configuration for Doom as Vanilla Emacs
;;(setq evil-default-state 'emacs)
;;; $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 "John Doe"
user-mail-address "[email protected]")
;; 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 "monospace" :size 12 :weight 'semi-light)
;; doom-variable-pitch-font (font-spec :family "sans" :size 13))
;; 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.
;;(require 'org)
;; (org-babel-load-file "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/toOrg.org")
;; (org-babel-load-file "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/keybinding.org")
;; (org-babel-load-file "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/OrgConfig.org")
;; (org-babel-load-file "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/Mode.org")
;; [[https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/LoadingLispFiles][Loading from EmacsLisp]]
;; [[https://emacs.stackexchange.com/questions/3310/difference-between-load-file-and-load][Difference between load-file and load]]
(load "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/+Org")
(load "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/+KeyBinding")
(load "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/+Config")
(load "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/+Mode")
(load "e:/spacemacs/emacs26-3/.doom.d/oc/+Tweaks")