I'm writing a script right now. So far I've got a constructor written, and comments written for what the "main method" equivalent part of it will be doing.
My next step is to implement the first comment: reading in my input file, at which point I'll add some temporary code to loop through and print out what got read in, so I know I did that right.
Then I'll move on to implementing the next main-method comment, which'll loop through records from my input file, open files it says to, find certain lines, and edit the text of em. So basically using the loop I already wrote above, I'll add in code for it to find the line number I want, and print that out so I know that bit works.
etc etc. It's all iterative. You start with bare bones, and add meat and tendons here and there, iteratively, throwing in test output as you go so you know the bit you just made works.
edit: and you don't have to go in order, either. Writing comments like I did that lay out what my "main method" will be doing, lets me know "okay, i've got a file-reading bit, a file-seeking, -interpreting, and -writing bit, I'll need a bit that outputs results as CSV..." and I wrote above about implementing the first step and a little of the second, but the constructor I have written is for the last step, my results-as-CSV step, because that's a thing that was easy to think about while I pondered the tougher bits. I'll add more to that constructor, probably, as I realize "oh yeah I wanna know about X aspect of each operation result, too!"
There'll be lots of TODO comments here and there as I bounce around, and it'll get built up in bits and pieces, like starting with a spooky skeleton and adding more and more meat to it til eventually you have the whole body
Monster Hunter 4U (and possibly others) has triggered shoutouts (e.g., paraphrasing, "I'm jumping on the monster!" when you jump on the monster, "Oh no, I've been knocked out" when you get knocked out, etc) that show up in each player's own language.
Final Fantasy 14 has a series of dropdown chat menus, and handy tab-completion, that let you say words/vocab (like "White Mage") or phrases ("Let's queue for a dungeon!") that show up in players' own languages
Mine are this same way. My side mirrors do a better job at covering the gap between my peripheral and my rearview this way, instead of overlapping as much with my rearview.
Oh. I assumed oats and other grains were naturally yellow-colored plants, since that's how they're always depicted, but from checking Google I see that's not true.
Are the 'golden fields' actually green for part of the year? Is it seasonal? They can't be perpetually dead, but I'm failing to find any further information.
Yes, for a brief period in spring, especially after a good rain, the hills are coated in stunning fields of vivid green. You'd think you were in Ireland.
Oats are green, but dry out as yellow straw (the classic yellow thatch roof look is dried oaten straw, for instance)
Diabetes produces high blood sugar that damages the walls of the arteries and veins
A combination of damaged lungs (less oxygen intake than normal) and troubles moving the scarce oxygen around the body trough a partially blocked circulatory system is not good news for the patient and can increase the risk of a heart failure and dead. If the lungs fail, the heart will fail next.
I'll bet you're just thinking of the box-step (the super basic step where you basically walk in a box shape).
If I'm not misremembering my lessons--to do some of the turns properly, the woman has to be essentially straddling the man's upper leg. It was a pain to do some of those with partners who weren't comfortable with that kind of contact.
Right, I just mean that the way you phrased it sounded like you were picturing a super vanilla, middle-school-dance-esque box-stepping couple (in 3/4 time).
All's I meant is I can see how waltz was considered risque; as a sheltered guy, I was caught really off-guard when our instructor positioned my partner and I in the way I described.