;; -*- no-byte-compile: t; -*- ;;; $DOOMDIR/packages.el ;; To install a package with Doom you must declare them here and run 'doom sync' ;; on the command line, then restart Emacs for the changes to take effect -- or ;; use 'M-x doom/reload'. ;; (package-install 'quelpa-use-package) ;; (require 'quelpa-use-package) ;; ;; Install Ement. ;; (use-package ement ;; :quelpa (ement :fetcher github :repo "alphapapa/ement.el" ;; )) ;; To install SOME-PACKAGE from MELPA, ELPA or emacsmirror: ;(package! some-package) ;; To install a package directly from a remote git repo, you must specify a ;; `:recipe'. You'll find documentation on what `:recipe' accepts here: ;; https://github.com/radian-software/straight.el#the-recipe-format ;(package! another-package ; :recipe (:host github :repo "username/repo")) ;; If the package you are trying to install does not contain a PACKAGENAME.el ;; file, or is located in a subdirectory of the repo, you'll need to specify ;; `:files' in the `:recipe': ;(package! this-package ; :recipe (:host github :repo "username/repo" ; :files ("some-file.el" "src/lisp/*.el"))) ;; If you'd like to disable a package included with Doom, you can do so here ;; with the `:disable' property: ;(package! builtin-package :disable t) ;; You can override the recipe of a built in package without having to specify ;; all the properties for `:recipe'. These will inherit the rest of its recipe ;; from Doom or MELPA/ELPA/Emacsmirror: ;(package! builtin-package :recipe (:nonrecursive t)) ;(package! builtin-package-2 :recipe (:repo "myfork/package")) ;; Specify a `:branch' to install a package from a particular branch or tag. ;; This is required for some packages whose default branch isn't 'master' (which ;; our package manager can't deal with; see radian-software/straight.el#279) ;(package! builtin-package :recipe (:branch "develop")) ;; Use `:pin' to specify a particular commit to install. ;(package! builtin-package :pin "1a2b3c4d5e") ;; Doom's packages are pinned to a specific commit and updated from release to ;; release. The `unpin!' macro allows you to unpin single packages... ;(unpin! pinned-package) ;; ...or multiple packages ;(unpin! pinned-package another-pinned-package) ;; ...Or *all* packages (NOT RECOMMENDED; will likely break things) ;(unpin! t)