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This is use-package.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.7 from
use-package.texi.
Copyright (C) 2012-2022 John Wiegley <johnw@newartisans.com>
You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms
of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option)
any later version.
This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* use-package: (use-package). Declarative package configuration for Emacs.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY

File: use-package.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir)
use-package User Manual
***********************
The use-package macro allows you to isolate package configuration in
your .emacs file in a way that is both performance-oriented and, well,
tidy. I created it because I have over 80 packages that I use in Emacs,
and things were getting difficult to manage. Yet with this utility my
total load time is around 2 seconds, with no loss of functionality!
Copyright (C) 2012-2022 John Wiegley <johnw@newartisans.com>
You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms
of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option)
any later version.
This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
* Menu:
* Introduction::
* Installation::
* Getting Started::
* Basic Concepts::
* Issues/Requests::
* Keywords::
* Debugging Tools::
— The Detailed Node Listing —
Installation
* Installing from an Elpa Archive::
* Installing from the Git Repository::
* Post-Installation Tasks::
Keywords
* after::
* bind-keymap, bind-keymap*: bind-keymap bind-keymap*.
* bind, bind*: bind bind*.
* commands::
* preface, init, config: preface init config.
* custom::
* custom-face::
* defer, demand: defer demand.
* defines, functions: defines functions.
* diminish, delight: diminish delight.
* disabled::
* ensure, pin: ensure pin.
* hook::
* if, when, unless: if when unless.
* load-path::
* mode, interpreter: mode interpreter.
* magic, magic-fallback: magic magic-fallback.
* no-require::
* requires::
:bind, :bind*
* Binding to local keymaps::

File: use-package.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Installation, Prev: Top, Up: Top
1 Introduction
**************
The use-package macro allows you to isolate package configuration in
your .emacs file in a way that is both performance-oriented and, well,
tidy. I created it because I have over 80 packages that I use in Emacs,
and things were getting difficult to manage. Yet with this utility my
total load time is around 2 seconds, with no loss of functionality!
More text to come...

File: use-package.info, Node: Installation, Next: Getting Started, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top
2 Installation
**************
use-package can be installed using Emacs package manager or manually
from its development repository.
* Menu:
* Installing from an Elpa Archive::
* Installing from the Git Repository::
* Post-Installation Tasks::

File: use-package.info, Node: Installing from an Elpa Archive, Next: Installing from the Git Repository, Up: Installation
2.1 Installing from an Elpa Archive
===================================
use-package is available from Melpa and Melpa-Stable. If you havent
used Emacs package manager before, then it is high time you familiarize
yourself with it by reading the documentation in the Emacs manual, see
*note (emacs)Packages::. Then add one of the archives to
package-archives:
• To use Melpa:
(require 'package)
(add-to-list 'package-archives
'("melpa" . "https://melpa.org/packages/") t)
• To use Melpa-Stable:
(require 'package)
(add-to-list 'package-archives
'("melpa-stable" . "https://stable.melpa.org/packages/") t)
Once you have added your preferred archive, you need to update the
local package list using:
M-x package-refresh-contents RET
Once you have done that, you can install use-package and its
dependencies using:
M-x package-install RET use-package RET
Now see *note Post-Installation Tasks::.

File: use-package.info, Node: Installing from the Git Repository, Next: Post-Installation Tasks, Prev: Installing from an Elpa Archive, Up: Installation
2.2 Installing from the Git Repository
======================================
First, use Git to clone the use-package repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/jwiegley/use-package.git ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/use-package
$ cd ~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/use-package
Then compile the libraries and generate the info manuals:
$ make
You may need to create /path/to/use-package/config.mk with the
following content before running make:
LOAD_PATH = -L /path/to/use-package
Finally add this to your init file:
(add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/use-package")
(require 'use-package)
(with-eval-after-load 'info
(info-initialize)
(add-to-list 'Info-directory-list
"~/.emacs.d/site-lisp/use-package/"))
Note that elements of load-path should not end with a slash, while
those of Info-directory-list should.
Instead of running use-package directly from the repository by adding
it to the load-path, you might want to instead install it in some
other directory using sudo make install and setting load-path
accordingly.
To update use-package use:
$ git pull
$ make
At times it might be necessary to run make clean all instead.
To view all available targets use make help.
Now see *note Post-Installation Tasks::.

File: use-package.info, Node: Post-Installation Tasks, Prev: Installing from the Git Repository, Up: Installation
2.3 Post-Installation Tasks
===========================
After installing use-package you should verify that you are indeed using
the use-package release you think you are using. Its best to restart
Emacs before doing so, to make sure you are not using an outdated value
for load-path.
C-h v use-package-version RET
should display something like
use-package-versions value is "2.4.1"
If you are completely new to use-package then see *note Getting
Started::.
If you run into problems, then please see the *note Debugging
Tools::.

File: use-package.info, Node: Getting Started, Next: Basic Concepts, Prev: Installation, Up: Top
3 Getting Started
*****************
TODO. For now, see README.md.

File: use-package.info, Node: Basic Concepts, Next: Issues/Requests, Prev: Getting Started, Up: Top
4 Basic Concepts
****************
use-package was created for few basic reasons, each of which drove the
design in various ways. Understanding these reasons may help make some
of those decisions clearer:
• To gather all configuration details of a package into one place,
making it easier to copy, disable, or move it elsewhere in the init
file.
• To reduce duplication and boilerplate, capturing several common
practices as mere keywords both easy and intuitive to use.
• To make startup time of Emacs as quick as possible, without
sacrificing the quantity of add-on packages used.
• To make it so errors encountered during startup disable only the
package raising the error, and as little else as possible, leaving
a close to a functional Emacs as possible.
• To allow byte-compilation of ones init file so that any warnings
or errors seen are meaningful. In this way, even if
byte-compilation is not used for speed (reason 3), it can still be
used as a sanity check.

File: use-package.info, Node: Issues/Requests, Next: Keywords, Prev: Basic Concepts, Up: Top
5 Issues/Requests
*****************

File: use-package.info, Node: Keywords, Next: Debugging Tools, Prev: Issues/Requests, Up: Top
6 Keywords
**********
* Menu:
* after::
* bind-keymap, bind-keymap*: bind-keymap bind-keymap*.
* bind, bind*: bind bind*.
* commands::
* preface, init, config: preface init config.
* custom::
* custom-face::
* defer, demand: defer demand.
* defines, functions: defines functions.
* diminish, delight: diminish delight.
* disabled::
* ensure, pin: ensure pin.
* hook::
* if, when, unless: if when unless.
* load-path::
* mode, interpreter: mode interpreter.
* magic, magic-fallback: magic magic-fallback.
* no-require::
* requires::

File: use-package.info, Node: after, Next: bind-keymap bind-keymap*, Up: Keywords
6.1 :after
============
Sometimes it only makes sense to configure a package after another has
been loaded, because certain variables or functions are not in scope
until that time. This can achieved using an :after keyword that
allows a fairly rich description of the exact conditions when loading
should occur. Here is an example:
(use-package hydra
:load-path "site-lisp/hydra")
(use-package ivy
:load-path "site-lisp/swiper")
(use-package ivy-hydra
:after (ivy hydra))
In this case, because all of these packages are demand-loaded in the
order they occur, the use of :after is not strictly necessary. By
using it, however, the above code becomes order-independent, without an
implicit depedence on the nature of your init file.
By default, :after (foo bar) is the same as :after (:all foo
bar), meaning that loading of the given package will not happen until
both foo and bar have been loaded. Here are some of the other
possibilities:
:after (foo bar)
:after (:all foo bar)
:after (:any foo bar)
:after (:all (:any foo bar) (:any baz quux))
:after (:any (:all foo bar) (:all baz quux))
When you nest selectors, such as (:any (:all foo bar) (:all baz
quux)), it means that the package will be loaded when either both foo
and bar have been loaded, or both baz and quux have been loaded.
*NOTE*: Pay attention if you set use-package-always-defer to t, and
also use the :after keyword, as you will need to specify how the
declared package is to be loaded: e.g., by some :bind. If youre not
using one of the mechanisms that registers autoloads, such as :bind or
:hook, and your package manager does not provide autoloads, its
possible that without adding :demand t to those declarations, your
package will never be loaded.

File: use-package.info, Node: bind-keymap bind-keymap*, Next: bind bind*, Prev: after, Up: Keywords
6.2 :bind-keymap, :bind-keymap*
===================================
Normally :bind expects that commands are functions that will be
autoloaded from the given package. However, this does not work if one
of those commands is actually a keymap, since keymaps are not functions,
and cannot be autoloaded using Emacs autoload mechanism.
To handle this case, use-package offers a special, limited variant
of :bind called :bind-keymap. The only difference is that the
"commands" bound to by :bind-keymap must be keymaps defined in the
package, rather than command functions. This is handled behind the
scenes by generating custom code that loads the package containing the
keymap, and then re-executes your keypress after the first load, to
reinterpret that keypress as a prefix key.
For example:
(use-package projectile
:bind-keymap
("C-c p" . projectile-command-map)

File: use-package.info, Node: bind bind*, Next: commands, Prev: bind-keymap bind-keymap*, Up: Keywords
6.3 :bind, :bind*
=====================
Another common thing to do when loading a module is to bind a key to
primary commands within that module:
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:bind ("C-." . ace-jump-mode))
This does two things: first, it creates an autoload for the
ace-jump-mode command and defers loading of ace-jump-mode until you
actually use it. Second, it binds the key C-. to that command. After
loading, you can use M-x describe-personal-keybindings to see all such
keybindings youve set throughout your .emacs file.
A more literal way to do the exact same thing is:
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:commands ace-jump-mode
:init
(bind-key "C-." 'ace-jump-mode))
When you use the :commands keyword, it creates autoloads for those
commands and defers loading of the module until they are used. Since
the :init form is always run—even if ace-jump-mode might not be on
your system—remember to restrict :init code to only what would succeed
either way.
The :bind keyword takes either a cons or a list of conses:
(use-package hi-lock
:bind (("M-o l" . highlight-lines-matching-regexp)
("M-o r" . highlight-regexp)
("M-o w" . highlight-phrase)))
The :commands keyword likewise takes either a symbol or a list of
symbols.
NOTE: Special keys like tab or F1-Fn can be written in square
brackets, i.e. [tab] instead of "tab". The syntax for the
keybindings is similar to the "kbd" syntax: see the Emacs Manual
(https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Init-Rebinding.html)
for more information.
Examples:
(use-package helm
:bind (("M-x" . helm-M-x)
("M-<f5>" . helm-find-files)
([f10] . helm-buffers-list)
([S-f10] . helm-recentf)))
* Menu:
* Binding to local keymaps::

File: use-package.info, Node: Binding to local keymaps, Up: bind bind*
6.3.1 Binding to local keymaps
------------------------------
Slightly different from binding a key to a keymap, is binding a key
*within* a local keymap that only exists after the package is loaded.
use-package supports this with a :map modifier, taking the local
keymap to bind to:
(use-package helm
:bind (:map helm-command-map
("C-c h" . helm-execute-persistent-action)))
The effect of this statement is to wait until helm has loaded, and
then to bind the key C-c h to helm-execute-persistent-action within
Helms local keymap, helm-mode-map.
Multiple uses of :map may be specified. Any binding occurring
before the first use of :map are applied to the global keymap:
(use-package term
:bind (("C-c t" . term)
:map term-mode-map
("M-p" . term-send-up)
("M-n" . term-send-down)
:map term-raw-map
("M-o" . other-window)
("M-p" . term-send-up)
("M-n" . term-send-down)))

File: use-package.info, Node: commands, Next: preface init config, Prev: bind bind*, Up: Keywords
6.4 :commands
===============

File: use-package.info, Node: preface init config, Next: custom, Prev: commands, Up: Keywords
6.5 :preface, :init, :config
==================================
Here is the simplest use-package declaration:
;; This is only needed once, near the top of the file
(eval-when-compile
;; Following line is not needed if use-package.el is in ~/.emacs.d
(add-to-list 'load-path "<path where use-package is installed>")
(require 'use-package))
(use-package foo)
This loads in the package foo, but only if foo is available on
your system. If not, a warning is logged to the *Messages* buffer.
If it succeeds, a message about "Loading foo" is logged, along with
the time it took to load, if it took over 0.1 seconds.
Use the :init keyword to execute code before a package is loaded.
It accepts one or more forms, up until the next keyword:
(use-package foo
:init
(setq foo-variable t))
Similarly, :config can be used to execute code after a package is
loaded. In cases where loading is done lazily (see more about
autoloading below), this execution is deferred until after the autoload
occurs:
(use-package foo
:init
(setq foo-variable t)
:config
(foo-mode 1))
As you might expect, you can use :init and :config together:
(use-package color-moccur
:commands (isearch-moccur isearch-all)
:bind (("M-s O" . moccur)
:map isearch-mode-map
("M-o" . isearch-moccur)
("M-O" . isearch-moccur-all))
:init
(setq isearch-lazy-highlight t)
:config
(use-package moccur-edit))
In this case, I want to autoload the commands isearch-moccur and
isearch-all from color-moccur.el, and bind keys both at the global
level and within the isearch-mode-map (see next section). When the
package is actually loaded (by using one of these commands),
moccur-edit is also loaded, to allow editing of the moccur buffer.

File: use-package.info, Node: custom, Next: custom-face, Prev: preface init config, Up: Keywords
6.6 :custom
=============
The :custom keyword allows customization of package custom variables.
(use-package comint
:custom
(comint-buffer-maximum-size 20000 "Increase comint buffer size.")
(comint-prompt-read-only t "Make the prompt read only."))
The documentation string is not mandatory.

File: use-package.info, Node: custom-face, Next: defer demand, Prev: custom, Up: Keywords
6.7 :custom-face
==================
The :custom-face keyword allows customization of package custom faces.
(use-package eruby-mode
:custom-face
(eruby-standard-face ((t (:slant italic)))))

File: use-package.info, Node: defer demand, Next: defines functions, Prev: custom-face, Up: Keywords
6.8 :defer, :demand
=======================
In almost all cases you dont need to manually specify :defer t. This
is implied whenever :bind or :mode or :interpreter is used.
Typically, you only need to specify :defer if you know for a fact that
some other package will do something to cause your package to load at
the appropriate time, and thus you would like to defer loading even
though use-package isnt creating any autoloads for you.
You can override package deferral with the :demand keyword. Thus,
even if you use :bind, using :demand will force loading to occur
immediately and not establish an autoload for the bound key.

File: use-package.info, Node: defines functions, Next: diminish delight, Prev: defer demand, Up: Keywords
6.9 :defines, :functions
============================
Another feature of use-package is that it always loads every file that
it can when .emacs is being byte-compiled. This helps to silence
spurious warnings about unknown variables and functions.
However, there are times when this is just not enough. For those
times, use the :defines and :functions keywords to introduce dummy
variable and function declarations solely for the sake of the
byte-compiler:
(use-package texinfo
:defines texinfo-section-list
:commands texinfo-mode
:init
(add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.texi$" . texinfo-mode)))
If you need to silence a missing function warning, you can use
:functions:
(use-package ruby-mode
:mode "\\.rb\\'"
:interpreter "ruby"
:functions inf-ruby-keys
:config
(defun my-ruby-mode-hook ()
(require 'inf-ruby)
(inf-ruby-keys))
(add-hook 'ruby-mode-hook 'my-ruby-mode-hook))

File: use-package.info, Node: diminish delight, Next: disabled, Prev: defines functions, Up: Keywords
6.10 :diminish, :delight
============================
use-package also provides built-in support for the diminish and
delight utilities—if you have them installed. Their purpose is to
remove or change minor mode strings in your mode-line.
diminish (https://github.com/myrjola/diminish.el) is invoked with the
:diminish keyword, which is passed either a minor mode symbol, a cons
of the symbol and its replacement string, or just a replacement string,
in which case the minor mode symbol is guessed to be the package name
with "-mode" appended at the end:
(use-package abbrev
:diminish abbrev-mode
:config
(if (file-exists-p abbrev-file-name)
(quietly-read-abbrev-file)))
delight (https://elpa.gnu.org/packages/delight.html) is invoked with
the :delight keyword, which is passed a minor mode symbol, a
replacement string or quoted mode-line data
(https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Mode-Line-Data.html)
(in which case the minor mode symbol is guessed to be the package name
with "-mode" appended at the end), both of these, or several lists of
both. If no arguments are provided, the default mode name is hidden
completely.
;; Don't show anything for rainbow-mode.
(use-package rainbow-mode
:delight)
;; Don't show anything for auto-revert-mode, which doesn't match
;; its package name.
(use-package autorevert
:delight auto-revert-mode)
;; Remove the mode name for projectile-mode, but show the project name.
(use-package projectile
:delight '(:eval (concat " " (projectile-project-name))))
;; Completely hide visual-line-mode and change auto-fill-mode to " AF".
(use-package emacs
:delight
(auto-fill-function " AF")
(visual-line-mode))

File: use-package.info, Node: disabled, Next: ensure pin, Prev: diminish delight, Up: Keywords
6.11 :disabled
================
The :disabled keyword can turn off a module youre having difficulties
with, or stop loading something youre not using at the present time:
(use-package ess-site
:disabled
:commands R)
When byte-compiling your .emacs file, disabled declarations are
omitted from the output entirely, to accelerate startup times.

File: use-package.info, Node: ensure pin, Next: hook, Prev: disabled, Up: Keywords
6.12 :ensure, :pin
======================
You can use use-package to load packages from ELPA with package.el.
This is particularly useful if you share your .emacs among several
machines; the relevant packages are downloaded automatically once
declared in your .emacs. The :ensure keyword causes the package(s)
to be installed automatically if not already present on your system (set
(setq use-package-always-ensure t) if you wish this behavior to be
global for all packages):
(use-package magit
:ensure t)
If you need to install a different package from the one named by
use-package, you can specify it like this:
(use-package tex
:ensure auctex)
Lastly, when running on Emacs 24.4 or later, use-package can pin a
package to a specific archive, allowing you to mix and match packages
from different archives. The primary use-case for this is preferring
packages from the melpa-stable and gnu archives, but using specific
packages from melpa when you need to track newer versions than what is
available in the stable archives is also a valid use-case.
By default package.el prefers melpa over melpa-stable due to
the versioning (> evil-20141208.623 evil-1.0.9), so even if you are
tracking only a single package from melpa, you will need to tag all
the non-melpa packages with the appropriate archive. If this really
annoys you, then you can set use-package-always-pin to set a default.
If you want to manually keep a package updated and ignore upstream
updates, you can pin it to manual, which as long as there is no
repository by that name, will Just Work(tm).
use-package throws an error if you try to pin a package to an
archive that has not been configured using package-archives (apart
from the magic manual archive mentioned above):
Archive 'foo' requested for package 'bar' is not available.
Example:
(use-package company
:ensure t
:pin melpa-stable)
(use-package evil
:ensure t)
;; no :pin needed, as package.el will choose the version in melpa
(use-package adaptive-wrap
:ensure t
;; as this package is available only in the gnu archive, this is
;; technically not needed, but it helps to highlight where it
;; comes from
:pin gnu)
(use-package org
:ensure t
;; ignore org-mode from upstream and use a manually installed version
:pin manual)
*NOTE*: the :pin argument has no effect on emacs versions < 24.4.

File: use-package.info, Node: hook, Next: if when unless, Prev: ensure pin, Up: Keywords
6.13 :hook
============
The :hook keyword allows adding functions onto hooks, here only the
basename of the hook is required. Thus, all of the following are
equivalent:
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:hook prog-mode)
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:hook (prog-mode . ace-jump-mode))
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:commands ace-jump-mode
:init
(add-hook 'prog-mode-hook #'ace-jump-mode))
And likewise, when multiple hooks should be applied, the following
are also equivalent:
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:hook (prog-mode text-mode))
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:hook ((prog-mode text-mode) . ace-jump-mode))
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:hook ((prog-mode . ace-jump-mode)
(text-mode . ace-jump-mode)))
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:commands ace-jump-mode
:init
(add-hook 'prog-mode-hook #'ace-jump-mode)
(add-hook 'text-mode-hook #'ace-jump-mode))
The use of :hook, as with :bind, :mode, :interpreter, etc.,
causes the functions being hooked to implicitly be read as :commands
(meaning they will establish interactive autoload definitions for that
module, if not already defined as functions), and so :defer t is also
implied by :hook.

File: use-package.info, Node: if when unless, Next: load-path, Prev: hook, Up: Keywords
6.14 :if, :when, :unless
==============================
You can use the :if keyword to predicate the loading and
initialization of modules.
For example, I only want edit-server running for my main, graphical
Emacs, not for other Emacsen I may start at the command line:
(use-package edit-server
:if window-system
:init
(add-hook 'after-init-hook 'server-start t)
(add-hook 'after-init-hook 'edit-server-start t))
In another example, we can load things conditional on the operating
system:
(use-package exec-path-from-shell
:if (memq window-system '(mac ns))
:ensure t
:config
(exec-path-from-shell-initialize))
Note that :when is provided as an alias for :if, and :unless
foo means the same thing as :if (not foo).

File: use-package.info, Node: load-path, Next: mode interpreter, Prev: if when unless, Up: Keywords
6.15 :load-path
=================
If your package needs a directory added to the load-path in order to
load, use :load-path. This takes a symbol, a function, a string or a
list of strings. If the path is relative, it is expanded within
user-emacs-directory:
(use-package ess-site
:load-path "site-lisp/ess/lisp/"
:commands R)
Note that when using a symbol or a function to provide a dynamically
generated list of paths, you must inform the byte-compiler of this
definition so the value is available at byte-compilation time. This is
done by using the special form eval-and-compile (as opposed to
eval-when-compile). Further, this value is fixed at whatever was
determined during compilation, to avoid looking up the same information
again on each startup:
(eval-and-compile
(defun ess-site-load-path ()
(shell-command "find ~ -path ess/lisp")))
(use-package ess-site
:load-path (lambda () (list (ess-site-load-path)))
:commands R)

File: use-package.info, Node: mode interpreter, Next: magic magic-fallback, Prev: load-path, Up: Keywords
6.16 :mode, :interpreter
============================
Similar to :bind, you can use :mode and :interpreter to establish
a deferred binding within the auto-mode-alist and
interpreter-mode-alist variables. The specifier to either keyword can
be a cons cell, a list of cons cells, or a string or regexp:
(use-package ruby-mode
:mode "\\.rb\\'"
:interpreter "ruby")
;; The package is "python" but the mode is "python-mode":
(use-package python
:mode ("\\.py\\'" . python-mode)
:interpreter ("python" . python-mode))
If you arent using :commands, :bind, :bind*, :bind-keymap,
:bind-keymap*, :mode, or :interpreter (all of which imply
:defer; see the docstring for use-package for a brief description of
each), you can still defer loading with the :defer keyword:
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:defer t
:init
(autoload 'ace-jump-mode "ace-jump-mode" nil t)
(bind-key "C-." 'ace-jump-mode))
This does exactly the same thing as the following:
(use-package ace-jump-mode
:bind ("C-." . ace-jump-mode))

File: use-package.info, Node: magic magic-fallback, Next: no-require, Prev: mode interpreter, Up: Keywords
6.17 :magic, :magic-fallback
================================
Similar to :mode and :interpreter, you can also use :magic and
:magic-fallback to cause certain function to be run if the beginning
of a file matches a given regular expression. The difference between
the two is that :magic-fallback has a lower priority than :mode.
For example:
(use-package pdf-tools
:load-path "site-lisp/pdf-tools/lisp"
:magic ("%PDF" . pdf-view-mode)
:config
(pdf-tools-install))
This registers an autoloaded command for pdf-view-mode, defers
loading of pdf-tools, and runs pdf-view-mode if the beginning of a
buffer matches the string "%PDF".

File: use-package.info, Node: no-require, Next: requires, Prev: magic magic-fallback, Up: Keywords
6.18 :no-require
==================
Normally, use-package will load each package at compile time before
compiling the configuration, to ensure that any necessary symbols are in
scope to satisfy the byte-compiler. At times this can cause problems,
since a package may have special loading requirements, and all that you
want to use use-package for is to add a configuration to the
eval-after-load hook. In such cases, use the :no-require keyword:
(use-package foo
:no-require t
:config
(message "This is evaluated when `foo' is loaded"))

File: use-package.info, Node: requires, Prev: no-require, Up: Keywords
6.19 :requires
================
While the :after keyword delays loading until the dependencies are
loaded, the somewhat simpler :requires keyword simply never loads the
package if the dependencies are not available at the time the
use-package declaration is encountered. By "available" in this
context it means that foo is available of (featurep 'foo) evaluates
to a non-nil value. For example:
(use-package abbrev
:requires foo)
This is the same as:
(use-package abbrev
:if (featurep 'foo))
As a convenience, a list of such packages may be specified:
(use-package abbrev
:requires (foo bar baz))
For more complex logic, such as that supported by :after, simply
use :if and the appropriate Lisp expression.

File: use-package.info, Node: Debugging Tools, Prev: Keywords, Up: Top
7 Debugging Tools
*****************
TODO

Tag Table:
Node: Top786
Node: Introduction2828
Node: Installation3339
Node: Installing from an Elpa Archive3691
Node: Installing from the Git Repository4820
Node: Post-Installation Tasks6363
Node: Getting Started7051
Node: Basic Concepts7230
Node: Issues/Requests8394
Node: Keywords8531
Node: after9299
Node: bind-keymap bind-keymap*11311
Node: bind bind*12364
Node: Binding to local keymaps14439
Node: commands15586
Node: preface init config15728
Node: custom17827
Node: custom-face18267
Node: defer demand18587
Node: defines functions19399
Node: diminish delight20544
Node: disabled22487
Node: ensure pin22982
Node: hook25712
Node: if when unless27137
Node: load-path28083
Node: mode interpreter29229
Node: magic magic-fallback30540
Node: no-require31394
Node: requires32098
Node: Debugging Tools32985

End Tag Table

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