## Why The application currently uses a fixed hacker theme with a dark background. Users may prefer a light theme for better visibility in bright environments or to match their system preferences. Adding dark/light mode with system theme detection and manual override provides flexibility and improves accessibility. ## What Changes - Add system theme detection that automatically applies dark or light mode based on the user's OS/browser preference - Add a manual theme toggle control that allows users to override the system preference - Persist the user's theme preference in localStorage so it survives page refreshes - Update the hacker theme implementation to support both light and dark variants while maintaining the monospace, neon-accent aesthetic - Ensure all UI components (sidebar, chart, buttons, inputs, modals) adapt correctly to both themes ## Capabilities ### New Capabilities - `theme-switching`: System for detecting OS theme preference, providing manual theme toggle, and persisting user preference across sessions ### Modified Capabilities - `hacker-theme`: Extend existing hacker theme to support both dark and light color variants while preserving monospace typography, neon accents, and terminal aesthetic - `ui-shell`: Add theme toggle control to the UI layout ## Impact - **Frontend**: New theme provider/context in Next.js app, updated Tailwind config with light mode colors, theme toggle component - **CSS**: Extended color palette in globals.css and tailwind.config.ts for light mode variants - **Components**: All components must support both themes (sidebar, chart canvas, toolbox, modals, inputs) - **Dependencies**: May require next-themes or similar library for robust theme management - **User preferences**: localStorage usage for theme persistence