Now for the reasons this kind of Dyson won't work in practice.
There is nowhere for reflected light to go, so the star will illuminate the inside of the sphere too brightly, and the whole sky will glow with a luminosity equal to 1/3 the local Sun's brightness if the sphere is 1au in radius; this means the inside of such a sphere will be very warm.
this is not a fatal flaw - to bring the inside surface temperature down you can make the sphere bigger. I think it would have to be several au in radius before the surface becomes temperate- all the better for providing living room. Or you use a smaller star.
Also the sphere would tend to collapse under its own gravity; it either has to be incredibly rigid, or it can be dynamically supported(see below).
But the real clincher is that gravity on such a sphere is towards the star; you would need artificial gravity generators; a technology which does not seem to exist.
There are, however a number of Dyson concepts which might be possible in the real world;
there are examples of each of these in the
Orion's Arm Universe add-on if you want them.
1/ Dyson's original idea was a swarm, not a shell; here is one, radiating away the waste heat after the swarm has utilised the star's energy.
a close-up of the swarm elements
A second type of Dyson uses lightweight sails to float on the light pressure from the star; these floating satellites are called statites and can support the weight of photovoltaic cells- these dyson statites are basically an energy collection device
Earlier, I mentioned dynamic support for shells; using rotating particle streams it seems possible to support a ring or a shell at any height above a planet or star.
However the gravity on such a structure is towards the centre, so you live on the outside. Here is one from the OA universe, surrounding a Brown Dwarf; once again it glows slightly as it radiates waste heat from the imprisoned object. You can just see the yellow lines of artificial illumination on the land surface, without which it would be quite dark.
Finally a slice of a dyson sphere is called a Ringworld; here is a small one
around a white dwarf
as the ring rotates, it produces centrifugal 'gravity'.