Onboarding screens for the interactive CLI.
Optional extras that add model-provider integrations.
Keep in sync with [project.optional-dependencies] in pyproject.toml.
Optional extras that add sandbox integrations.
Get the glyph set for the current charset mode.
Check whether the terminal is in ASCII charset mode.
Convenience wrapper so widgets can branch on charset without importing
both _detect_charset_mode and CharsetMode.
Install status for one optional dependency extra.
First-step onboarding screen that asks for the user's name.
Dismissal values:
"" when the user submits an empty input (continue, but skip name memory).None when the user dismisses with Escape (skip remaining onboarding).Onboarding screen that summarizes installed optional integrations.
LangChain brand colors and semantic constants for the CLI.
Single source of truth for color values used in Python code (Rich markup,
Content.styled, Content.from_markup). CSS-side styling should reference
Textual CSS variables: built-in variables
($primary, $background, $text-muted, $error-muted, etc.) are set via
register_theme() in DeepAgentsApp.__init__, while the few app-specific
variables ($mode-bash, $mode-command, $skill, $skill-hover, $tool,
$tool-hover) are backed by these constants via App.get_theme_variable_defaults().
Code that needs custom CSS variable values should call
get_css_variable_defaults(dark=...). For the full semantic color palette, look
up the ThemeColors instance via get_registry().
Users can define custom themes in ~/.deepagents/config.toml under
[themes.<name>] sections. Each new theme section must include label (str);
dark (bool) defaults to False if omitted (set to True for dark themes).
Color fields are optional and fall back to the built-in dark/light palette based
on the dark flag. Sections whose name matches a built-in theme override its
colors without replacing it. See _load_user_themes() for details.