- Require all app names be set somewhere in the app registry, even if no variables need to be supplied (such as "gnome," which just calls a script based on scheme). This helps explicitly define the scope of "*" for applications, and can allow users to keep their config files without involving them in any `autoconf` call. - `scheme: auto` is a valid specification, but it will always resolve to either `light` or `dark`. "auto" is not a valid scheme choice when it comes to naming, but it can be used when making `autoconf` calls to set palettes that reflect the scheme that is currently set (just think of the analogous setting in the browser: auto just means to infer and set the local scheme to whatever the system scheme is set to). - Due `/call`, we no longer have explicit, hard-coded scheme commends in `set_theme.py`. Calls to GNOME's portal or to MacOS system settings can now just be seen as another "app" with a configurable script, reactive to the passed scheme option. - Here's the palette/scheme spec model * If specific `scheme` and `palette` are provided, files prefixed with `-`, `any-`, or `-any` are matched, in that order, for each unique file tail, for each app. * If `palette` is provided by `scheme` is not, it defaults to `auto` and will attempt to infer a specific value, yielding the same case as above. * If `scheme` cannot be inferred when `auto`, or is explicitly set to `any`, only `any-` file prefixes are matched. The idea here is that `any` indicates that a theme file is explicitly indifferent to the specification of that option, and won't interfere in an unintended way. The term `none` would work exactly the same here; `any` seems like it might be misleading, indicating it will match with any specific palette. In any case (no pun intended), palettes should create files with an `any` scheme if want to be considered as a possible setting when the `scheme` is any option, i.e., `light/dark/any`. * The same goes for `palette`, although it will default to `any` when unspecified. Thus, only commands/files that change `scheme` will be considered when `palette` isn't given. (I suppose we could also consider an `auto` default here that attempts to determine app-specific palettes that are currently set, and switch to their opposite `scheme` counterparts if available. You could still explicitly provide `any` to ensure you just isolate the `scheme` switch, but `auto` could allow something like a dark to light switch that applies to gnome (only supports scheme), changes kitty to "tone4-light" (a light counterpart the currently set palette is available), and Discord remains the same (as a hypothetical app for which we've created a dark palette but no a light one)). I guess the main takeaway with `any`/`auto` is the following: if `auto` can resolve to the concrete option currently set for a given app, behave as if that option was given. When `any` is provided (or `auto` fails to infer a concrete setting), _isolate_ that property (either `scheme` or `palette`) and ensure it doesn't change (even when another might, and doing so by only matching theme files that have actually used `any`, indicating they actually deliver on the agreed upon behavior here). * If neither are given, (depending on what we decide), both would be `auto` and should do nothing (simply determine the `scheme` and `palette` currently set, requiring no updates). If both are `any`, this should also do nothing; `any` is meant to "freeze" that property, so we'd just be freezing both of the possible variables. One or both of these options could serve as a meaningful refresh, however, either re-symlinking the relevant/expected files and/or calling the refresh commands for each apps to ensure expected settings are freshly applied. - Config TOML accepts either `config_dir` or `config_map`, nothing else and only one of the two. - Refresh scripts should likely specify a shell shabang at the top of the file - `apps` can serve as a dotfiles folder - Support symlinking whole folders? - `any` might prefer to match configs with none over specific options, but will match any