Stefan Kangas <stefankangas@gmail.com> writes: > Philip Kaludercic <philipk@posteo.net> writes: > >> I cannot evaluate this, but isn't use-package a relatively stable >> package, that is mostly being bug-fixed? There really aren't that many >> new features being added all the time, so this might not be that >> important. Or am I mistaken? > > I don't think you're wrong, however I don't see any clear benefits to > making it a :core package as compared to just adding it as a normal > package, as long as it's developed externally. It's less work, and > seems to be good enough for org-mode, for example. > > But you're right that it might not be that important. Either or works. I just checked elpa-packages, assuming that the modus-themes were externally synchronised, but apparently this isn't the case. Maybe we could take a look at discussion from when Modus was merged into the core, to find arguments pro and contra. >> No, we have recently decided to scrap that documentation source in >> favour of the documentation generated on elpa.gnu.org -- that is if I >> understood everything correctly. > > OK, thanks. I now did my homework and read the related threads (sorry > for not doing that first). No problem. > 1. Does that mean that it is actually preferred to make all changes > directly in use-package.texi now? That is my understanding > 2. Should use-package.org just be scrapped, then? (I guess that, if the > answer is yes, we should first export the latest version of that file > to use-package.texi, and then continue from there.) That would follow. > 3. Payas mentioned working on the texinfo sources. What's the status of > that work? I'm ready to get started, but it seems better if we can > avoid doing the same work twice, so maybe I should base it on his > latest version? That I cannot say. >> How does Org-mode distinguish between @key, @kbd, @code and @var? > > See org-setup.org, org.org and the generated file org.texi. Basically > they use org-mode macros to add texinfo markup. Oh, that is interesting. Perhaps this would work too, my experience with org->texi has been dissatisfactory but limited.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4