{;; Enables verbose notifications from nfnl, including notifications about ;; when it starts up and when it compiles successfully. Useful for debugging ;; the plugin itself and checking that it's running when you expect it to. :verbose true ;; Passed to fennel.compileString when your code is compiled. ;; See https://fennel-lang.org/api for more information. :compiler-options {;; Disables ansi escape sequences in compiler output. :error-pinpoint false :compilerEnv _G} ;; Warning! In reality these paths are absolute and set to the root directory ;; of your project (where your .nfnl.fnl file is). This means even if you ;; open a .fnl file from outside your project's cwd the compiler will still ;; find your macro files. If you use relative paths like I'm demonstrating here ;; then macros will only work if your cwd is in the project you're working on. ;; They also use OS specific path separators, what you see below is just an example really. ;; I'm not including nfnl's directory from your runtimepath, but it would be there by default. ;; See :rtp-patterns below for more information on including other plugins in your path. ;; String to set the compiler's fennel.path to before compilation. :fennel-path "./?.fnl;./?/init.fnl;./fnl/?.fnl;./fnl/?/init.fnl" ;; String to set the compiler's fennel.macro-path to before compilation. :fennel-macro-path "./?.fnl;./?/init-macros.fnl;./?/init.fnl;./fnl/?.fnl;./fnl/?/init-macros.fnl;./fnl/?/init.fnl" ;; A list of glob patterns (autocmd pattern syntax) of files that ;; should be compiled. This is used as configuration for the BufWritePost ;; autocmd, so it'll only apply to buffers you're interested in. ;; Will use backslashes on Windows. ;; Defaults to compiling all .fnl files, you may want to limit it to your fnl/ directory. :source-file-patterns [:./fnl/.*.fnl :./fnl/*.fnl :./fnl/**/*.fnl :./init.fnl] ;; A function that is given the absolute path of a Fennel file and should return ;; the equivalent Lua path, by default this will translate `fnl/foo/bar.fnl` to `lua/foo/bar.lua`. ;; See the "Writing Lua elsewhere" tip below for an example function that writes to a sub directory. ;:fnl-path->lua-path (fn [fnl-path] ...) }