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diff --git a/configs/shared/emacs/.emacs.d/elpa/general-20180901.1552/general-autoloads.el b/configs/shared/emacs/.emacs.d/elpa/general-20180901.1552/general-autoloads.el new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..29f7278e3574 --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/shared/emacs/.emacs.d/elpa/general-20180901.1552/general-autoloads.el @@ -0,0 +1,368 @@ +;;; general-autoloads.el --- automatically extracted autoloads +;; +;;; Code: +(add-to-list 'load-path (directory-file-name (or (file-name-directory #$) (car load-path)))) + +;;;### (autoloads nil "general" "general.el" (23450 31866 790784 +;;;;;; 537000)) +;;; Generated autoloads from general.el + +(autoload 'general-define-key "general" "\ +The primary key definition function provided by general.el. + +Define MAPS, optionally using DEFINER, in the keymap(s) corresponding to STATES +and KEYMAPS. + +MAPS consists of paired keys (vectors or strings; also see +`general-implicit-kbd') and definitions (those mentioned in `define-key''s +docstring and general.el's \"extended\" definitions). All pairs (when not +ignored) will be recorded and can be later displayed with +`general-describe-keybindings'. + +If DEFINER is specified, a custom key definer will be used to bind MAPS. See +general.el's documentation/README for more information. + +Unlike with normal key definitions functions, the keymaps in KEYMAPS should be +quoted (this allows using the keymap name for other purposes, e.g. deferring +keybindings if the keymap symbol is not bound, optionally inferring the +corresponding major mode for a symbol by removing \"-map\" for :which-key, +easily storing the keymap name for use with `general-describe-keybindings', +etc.). Note that general.el provides other key definer macros that do not +require quoting keymaps. + +STATES corresponds to the evil state(s) to bind the keys in. Non-evil users +should not set STATES. When STATES is non-nil, `evil-define-key*' will be +used (the evil auxiliary keymaps corresponding STATES and KEYMAPS will be used); +otherwise `define-key' will be used (unless DEFINER is specified). KEYMAPS +defaults to 'global. There is also 'local, which create buffer-local +keybindings for both evil and non-evil keybindings. There are other special, +user-alterable \"shorthand\" symbols for keymaps and states (see +`general-keymap-aliases' and `general-state-aliases'). + +Note that STATES and KEYMAPS can either be lists or single symbols. If any +keymap does not exist, those keybindings will be deferred until the keymap does +exist, so using `eval-after-load' is not necessary with this function. + +PREFIX corresponds to a key to prefix keys in MAPS with and defaults to none. To +bind/unbind a key specified with PREFIX, \"\" can be specified as a key in +MAPS (e.g. ...:prefix \"SPC\" \"\" nil... will unbind space). + +The keywords in this paragraph are only useful for evil users. If +NON-NORMAL-PREFIX is specified, this prefix will be used instead of PREFIX for +states in `general-non-normal-states' (e.g. the emacs and insert states). This +argument will only have an effect if one of these states is in STATES or if +corresponding global keymap (e.g. `evil-insert-state-map') is in KEYMAPS. +Alternatively, GLOBAL-PREFIX can be used with PREFIX and/or NON-NORMAL-PREFIX to +bind keys in all states under the specified prefix. Like with NON-NORMAL-PREFIX, +GLOBAL-PREFIX will prevent PREFIX from applying to `general-non-normal-states'. +INFIX can be used to append a string to all of the specified prefixes. This is +potentially useful when you are using GLOBAL-PREFIX and/or NON-NORMAL-PREFIX so +that you can sandwich keys in between all the prefixes and the specified keys in +MAPS. This may be particularly useful if you are using default prefixes in a +wrapper function/macro so that you can add to them without needing to re-specify +all of them. If none of the other prefix keyword arguments are specified, INFIX +will have no effect. + +If PREFIX-COMMAND or PREFIX-MAP is specified, a prefix command and/or keymap +will be created. PREFIX-NAME can be additionally specified to set the keymap +menu name/prompt. If PREFIX-COMMAND is specified, `define-prefix-command' will +be used. Otherwise, only a prefix keymap will be created. Previously created +prefix commands/keymaps will never be redefined/cleared. All prefixes (including +the INFIX key, if specified) will then be bound to PREFIX-COMMAND or PREFIX-MAP. +If the user did not specify any PREFIX or manually specify any KEYMAPS, general +will bind all MAPS in the prefix keymap corresponding to either PREFIX-MAP or +PREFIX-COMMAND instead of in the default keymap. + +PREDICATE corresponds to a predicate to check to determine whether a definition +should be active (e.g. \":predicate '(eobp)\"). Definitions created with a +predicate will only be active when the predicate is true. When the predicate is +false, key lookup will continue to search for a match in lower-precedence +keymaps. + +In addition to the normal definitions supported by `define-key', general.el also +provides \"extended\" definitions, which are plists containing the normal +definition as well as other keywords. For example, PREDICATE can be specified +globally or locally in an extended definition. New global (~general-define-key~) +and local (extended definition) keywords can be added by the user. See +`general-extended-def-keywords' and general.el's documentation/README for more +information. + +PACKAGE is the global version of the extended definition keyword that specifies +the package a keymap is defined in (used for \"autoloading\" keymaps) + +PROPERTIES, REPEAT, and JUMP are the global versions of the extended definition +keywords used for adding evil command properties to commands. + +MAJOR-MODES, WK-MATCH-KEYS, WK-MATCH-BINDINGS, and WK-FULL-KEYS are the +corresponding global versions of which-key extended definition keywords. They +will only have an effect for extended definitions that specify :which-key or +:wk. See the section on extended definitions in the general.el +documentation/README for more information. + +LISPY-PLIST and WORF-PLIST are the global versions of extended definition +keywords that are used for each corresponding custom DEFINER. + +\(fn &rest MAPS &key DEFINER (STATES general-default-states) (KEYMAPS general-default-keymaps KEYMAPS-SPECIFIED-P) (PREFIX general-default-prefix) (NON-NORMAL-PREFIX general-default-non-normal-prefix) (GLOBAL-PREFIX general-default-global-prefix) INFIX PREFIX-COMMAND PREFIX-MAP PREFIX-NAME PREDICATE PACKAGE PROPERTIES REPEAT JUMP MAJOR-MODES (WK-MATCH-KEYS t) (WK-MATCH-BINDING t) (WK-FULL-KEYS t) LISPY-PLIST WORF-PLIST &allow-other-keys)" nil nil) + +(autoload 'general-emacs-define-key "general" "\ +A wrapper for `general-define-key' that is similar to `define-key'. +It has a positional argument for KEYMAPS (that will not be overridden by a later +:keymaps argument). Besides this, it acts the same as `general-define-key', and +ARGS can contain keyword arguments in addition to keybindings. This can +basically act as a drop-in replacement for `define-key', and unlike with +`general-define-key', KEYMAPS does not need to be quoted. + +\(fn KEYMAPS &rest ARGS)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-emacs-define-key 'lisp-indent-function '1) + +(autoload 'general-evil-define-key "general" "\ +A wrapper for `general-define-key' that is similar to `evil-define-key'. +It has positional arguments for STATES and KEYMAPS (that will not be overridden +by a later :keymaps or :states argument). Besides this, it acts the same as +`general-define-key', and ARGS can contain keyword arguments in addition to +keybindings. This can basically act as a drop-in replacement for +`evil-define-key', and unlike with `general-define-key', KEYMAPS does not need +to be quoted. + +\(fn STATES KEYMAPS &rest ARGS)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-evil-define-key 'lisp-indent-function '2) + +(autoload 'general-def "general" "\ +General definer that takes a variable number of positional arguments in ARGS. +This macro will act as `general-define-key', `general-emacs-define-key', or +`general-evil-define-key' based on how many of the initial arguments do not +correspond to keybindings. All quoted and non-quoted lists and symbols before +the first string, vector, or keyword are considered to be positional arguments. +This means that you cannot use a function or variable for a key that starts +immediately after the positional arguments. If you need to do this, you should +use one of the definers that `general-def' dispatches to or explicitly separate +the positional arguments from the maps with a bogus keyword pair like +\":start-maps t\" + +\(fn &rest ARGS)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-def 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) + +(autoload 'general-create-definer "general" "\ +A helper macro to create wrappers for `general-def'. +This can be used to create key definers that will use a certain keymap, evil +state, prefix key, etc. by default. NAME is the wrapper name and DEFAULTS are +the default arguments. WRAPPING can also be optionally specified to use a +different definer than `general-def'. It should not be quoted. + +\(fn NAME &rest DEFAULTS &key WRAPPING &allow-other-keys)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-create-definer 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) + +(autoload 'general-defs "general" "\ +A wrapper that splits into multiple `general-def's. +Each consecutive grouping of positional argument followed by keyword/argument +pairs (having only one or the other is fine) marks the start of a new section. +Each section corresponds to one use of `general-def'. This means that settings +only apply to the keybindings that directly follow. + +\(fn &rest ARGS)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-defs 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) + +(autoload 'general-unbind "general" "\ +A wrapper for `general-def' to unbind multiple keys simultaneously. +Insert after all keys in ARGS before passing ARGS to `general-def.' \":with + #'func\" can optionally specified to use a custom function instead (e.g. + `ignore'). + +\(fn &rest ARGS)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-unbind 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) + +(autoload 'general-describe-keybindings "general" "\ +Show all keys that have been bound with general in an org buffer. +Any local keybindings will be shown first followed by global keybindings. +With a non-nil prefix ARG only show bindings in active maps. + +\(fn &optional ARG)" t nil) + +(autoload 'general-key "general" "\ +Act as KEY's definition in the current context. +This uses an extended menu item's capability of dynamically computing a +definition. It is recommended over `general-simulate-key' wherever possible. KEY +should be a string given in `kbd' notation and should correspond to a single +definition (as opposed to a sequence of commands). When STATE is specified, look +up KEY with STATE as the current evil state. When specified, DOCSTRING will be +the menu item's name/description. ACCEPT-DEFAULT, NO-REMAP, and POSITION are +passed to `key-binding'. + +\(fn KEY &key STATE DOCSTRING ACCEPT-DEFAULT NO-REMAP POSITION)" nil t) + +(autoload 'general-simulate-keys "general" "\ +Deprecated. Please use `general-simulate-key' instead. + +\(fn KEYS &optional STATE KEYMAP (LOOKUP t) DOCSTRING NAME)" nil t) + +(autoload 'general-simulate-key "general" "\ +Create and return a command that simulates KEYS in STATE and KEYMAP. +KEYS should be a string given in `kbd' notation. It can also be a list of a +single command followed by a string of the key(s) to simulate after calling that +command. STATE should only be specified by evil users and should be a quoted +evil state. KEYMAP should not be quoted. Both STATE and KEYMAP aliases are +supported (but they have to be set when the macro is expanded). When neither +STATE or KEYMAP are specified, the key(s) will be simulated in the current +context. + +If NAME is specified, it will replace the automatically generated function name. +NAME should not be quoted. If DOCSTRING is specified, it will replace the +automatically generated docstring. + +Normally the generated function will look up KEY in the correct context to try +to match a command. To prevent this lookup, LOOKUP can be specified as nil. +Generally, you will want to keep LOOKUP non-nil because this will allow checking +the evil repeat property of matched commands to determine whether or not they +should be recorded. See the docstring for `general--simulate-keys' for more +information about LOOKUP. + +When a WHICH-KEY description is specified, it will replace the command name in +the which-key popup. + +When a command name is specified and that command has been remapped (i.e. [remap +command] is currently bound), the remapped version will be used instead of the +original command unless REMAP is specified as nil (it is true by default). + +The advantages of this over a keyboard macro are as follows: +- Prefix arguments are supported +- The user can control the context in which the keys are simulated +- The user can simulate both a named command and keys +- The user can simulate an incomplete key sequence (e.g. for a keymap) + +\(fn KEYS &key STATE KEYMAP NAME DOCSTRING (LOOKUP t) WHICH-KEY (REMAP t))" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-simulate-key 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) + +(autoload 'general-key-dispatch "general" "\ +Create and return a command that runs FALLBACK-COMMAND or a command in MAPS. +MAPS consists of <key> <command> pairs. If a key in MAPS is matched, the +corresponding command will be run. Otherwise FALLBACK-COMMAND will be run with +the unmatched keys. So, for example, if \"ab\" was pressed, and \"ab\" is not +one of the key sequences from MAPS, the FALLBACK-COMMAND will be run followed by +the simulated keypresses of \"ab\". Prefix arguments will still work regardless +of which command is run. This is useful for binding under non-prefix keys. For +example, this can be used to redefine a sequence like \"cw\" or \"cow\" in evil +but still have \"c\" work as `evil-change'. If TIMEOUT is specified, +FALLBACK-COMMAND will also be run in the case that the user does not press the +next key within the TIMEOUT (e.g. 0.5). + +NAME and DOCSTRING are optional keyword arguments. They can be used to replace +the automatically generated name and docstring for the created function. By +default, `cl-gensym' is used to prevent name clashes (e.g. allows the user to +create multiple different commands using `self-insert-command' as the +FALLBACK-COMMAND without explicitly specifying NAME to manually prevent +clashes). + +When INHERIT-KEYMAP is specified, all the keybindings from that keymap will be +inherited in MAPS. + +When a WHICH-KEY description is specified, it will replace the command name in +the which-key popup. + +When command to be executed has been remapped (i.e. [remap command] is currently +bound), the remapped version will be used instead of the original command unless +REMAP is specified as nil (it is true by default). + +\(fn FALLBACK-COMMAND &rest MAPS &key TIMEOUT INHERIT-KEYMAP NAME DOCSTRING WHICH-KEY (REMAP t) &allow-other-keys)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-key-dispatch 'lisp-indent-function '1) + +(autoload 'general-predicate-dispatch "general" "\ + + +\(fn FALLBACK-DEF &rest DEFS &key DOCSTRING &allow-other-keys)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-predicate-dispatch 'lisp-indent-function '1) + +(autoload 'general-translate-key "general" "\ +Translate keys in the keymap(s) corresponding to STATES and KEYMAPS. +STATES should be the name of an evil state, a list of states, or nil. KEYMAPS +should be a symbol corresponding to the keymap to make the translations in or a +list of keymap names. Keymap and state aliases are supported (as well as 'local +and 'global for KEYMAPS). MAPS corresponds to a list of translations (key +replacement pairs). For example, specifying \"a\" \"b\" will bind \"a\" to +\"b\"'s definition in the keymap. If DESTRUCTIVE is non-nil, the keymap will be +destructively altered without creating a backup. If DESTRUCTIVE is nil, a backup +of the keymap will be stored on the initial invocation, and future invocations +will always look up keys in the backup keymap. On the other hand, if DESTRUCTIVE +is non-nil, calling this function multiple times with \"a\" \"b\" \"b\" \"a\", +for example, would continue to swap and unswap the definitions of these keys. +This means that when DESTRUCTIVE is non-nil, all related swaps/cycles should be +done in the same invocation. + +\(fn STATES KEYMAPS &rest MAPS &key DESTRUCTIVE &allow-other-keys)" nil nil) + +(function-put 'general-translate-key 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) + +(autoload 'general-swap-key "general" "\ +Wrapper around `general-translate-key' for swapping keys. +STATES, KEYMAPS, and ARGS are passed to `general-translate-key'. ARGS should +consist of key swaps (e.g. \"a\" \"b\" is equivalent to \"a\" \"b\" \"b\" \"a\" +with `general-translate-key') and optionally keyword arguments for +`general-translate-key'. + +\(fn STATES KEYMAPS &rest ARGS)" nil t) + +(function-put 'general-swap-key 'lisp-indent-function 'defun) + +(autoload 'general-auto-unbind-keys "general" "\ +Advise `define-key' to automatically unbind keys when necessary. +This will prevent errors when a sub-sequence of a key is already bound (e.g. the +user attempts to bind \"SPC a\" when \"SPC\" is bound, resulting in a \"Key +sequnce starts with non-prefix key\" error). When UNDO is non-nil, remove +advice. + +\(fn &optional UNDO)" nil nil) + +(autoload 'general-add-hook "general" "\ +A drop-in replacement for `add-hook'. +Unlike `add-hook', HOOKS and FUNCTIONS can be single items or lists. APPEND and +LOCAL are passed directly to `add-hook'. + +\(fn HOOKS FUNCTIONS &optional APPEND LOCAL)" nil nil) + +(autoload 'general-remove-hook "general" "\ +A drop-in replacement for `remove-hook'. +Unlike `remove-hook', HOOKS and FUNCTIONS can be single items or lists. LOCAL is +passed directly to `remove-hook'. + +\(fn HOOKS FUNCTIONS &optional LOCAL)" nil nil) + +(autoload 'general-advice-add "general" "\ +A drop-in replacement for `advice-add'. +SYMBOLS, WHERE, FUNCTIONS, and PROPS correspond to the arguments for +`advice-add'. Unlike `advice-add', SYMBOLS and FUNCTIONS can be single items or +lists. + +\(fn SYMBOLS WHERE FUNCTIONS &optional PROPS)" nil nil) + (autoload 'general-add-advice "general") + +(autoload 'general-advice-remove "general" "\ +A drop-in replacement for `advice-remove'. +Unlike `advice-remove', SYMBOLS and FUNCTIONS can be single items or lists. + +\(fn SYMBOLS FUNCTIONS)" nil nil) + (autoload 'general-remove-advice "general") + +(autoload 'general-evil-setup "general" "\ +Set up some basic equivalents for vim mapping functions. +This creates global key definition functions for the evil states. +Specifying SHORT-NAMES as non-nil will create non-prefixed function +aliases such as `nmap' for `general-nmap'. + +\(fn &optional SHORT-NAMES _)" nil nil) + +;;;*** + +;; Local Variables: +;; version-control: never +;; no-byte-compile: t +;; no-update-autoloads: t +;; End: +;;; general-autoloads.el ends here |