

There are already light color schemes for Vim, Alacritty, and most of the popular applications. So, I asked myself, "what if I use a light theme during the day and switch back to a darker theme later in the evening?". Last week, when I had to increase my screen's brightness, I've figured out that I was using a pitch-black terminal screen and all my applications (Vim, Alacritty, etc.) had dark backgrounds. Since then, I never asked myself, "why does the terminal have a dark background?". I've started using a terminal when I was 17 years old. If you're like me, using shell applications, such as Tmux, Vim, etc., it won't work for you. Apple later released an "Auto" mode, which would switch to dark and light based on your location's time. Initially, I was manually changing my light and dark modes in macOS. Because I'm working remotely for a company with a large timezone difference, most of the time, this also means I'm working during the evenings. It makes reading text comfortable for me. So, I asked myself, 'what if I use a light theme during the day and switch back to a darker theme later in the evening?' Last week, when I had to increase my screen's brightness, I figured I was using a pitch-black terminal screen. Automatic dark mode for terminal applications
