-;; Author: Artur Malabarba <bruce.connor.am@gmail.com>
-;; URL: http://github.com/Bruce-Connor/elisp-bug-hunter
-;; Version: 0.1
+;; Author: Artur Malabarba <emacs@endlessparentheses.com>
+;; URL: http://github.com/Malabarba/elisp-bug-hunter
+;; Version: 0.2
-;; `bug-hunter' is an Emacs library that finds the source of an error or
-;; unexpected behavior inside an elisp configuration file (tipically
+;;
+;; The Bug Hunter is an Emacs library that finds the source of an error or
+;; unexpected behavior inside an elisp configuration file (typically
;; If your Emacs init file signals an error during startup, but you don’t
;; know why, simply issue
;; ,----
;; | M-x bug-hunter-init-file RET RET
;; `----
;; If your Emacs init file signals an error during startup, but you don’t
;; know why, simply issue
;; ,----
;; | M-x bug-hunter-init-file RET RET
;; `----
;; If Emacs starts up without errors but something is not working as it
;; should, invoke the same command, but give it in an assertion.
;; Essentially, if you can write a snippet that detects the issue and
;; returns non-nil, just provide this snippet as the assertion and the
;; Bug Hunter will do a bisection search for you.
;; If Emacs starts up without errors but something is not working as it
;; should, invoke the same command, but give it in an assertion.
;; Essentially, if you can write a snippet that detects the issue and
;; returns non-nil, just provide this snippet as the assertion and the
;; Bug Hunter will do a bisection search for you.
;; For example, let’s say there’s something in your init file that’s
;; loading the `cl' library, and you don’t want that. You /know/ you’re
;; not loading it yourself, but how can you figure out which external
;; package is responsible for this outrage?
;; For example, let’s say there’s something in your init file that’s
;; loading the `cl' library, and you don’t want that. You /know/ you’re
;; not loading it yourself, but how can you figure out which external
;; package is responsible for this outrage?
-;; Don’t despair! Just use `(find-file "dummy.tex")' as the assertion.
-;; - Did `ox-html' stop working due to some arcane misconfiguration? Just
-;; write an assertion that does an export and checks the result.
+;; - Don’t despair! Just use `(find-file "dummy.tex")' as the
+;; assertion.
+;; - Did `ox-html' stop working due to some arcane misconfiguration?
+;; - Just write an assertion that does an export and checks the result.