// Carry-On sub-hub data — /en/pack/carry-on/

const CARRY_ON_CARDS = [
  {
    id: "travel-documents",
    num: "01",
    topic: "Non-Negotiables",
    badge: "Start here",
    title: "Travel Documents",
    titleEm: "the full list.",
    desc: "Passport, copies of every page, vaccine certificate if required, travel insurance card, hotel address in local language, driver's license and IDP, printed boarding pass. Lose any of these in the overhead bin and the trip changes character immediately.",
    count: "8 guides",
    read: "Documents · Copies",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1555400038-63f5ba517a47?w=1600&q=80",
    size: "xl",
    href: "/en/pack/carry-on/travel-documents/",
    slug: "travel-documents",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "medications-carry-on",
    num: "02",
    topic: "Health",
    title: "Medications.",
    desc: "Original packaging only. Signed doctor's letter for anything controlled. Two days of every chronic medication in the carry-on — the rest in checked if there is one. Time-zone strategy for insulin and scheduled drugs. Never let these touch checked luggage.",
    count: "6 guides",
    read: "Rx · Prescriptions",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1584308666744-24d5c474f2ae?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
    href: "/en/pack/carry-on/medications-carry-on/",
    slug: "medications-carry-on",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "comfort-layer",
    num: "03",
    topic: "Comfort",
    title: "The Comfort Layer.",
    desc: "Eye mask, neck pillow, compression socks, refillable water bottle, one snack. Long-haul flights run cold; the seat runs harder. Land rested or land wrecked — the comfort layer is the difference between the two.",
    count: "5 guides",
    read: "Sleep · Comfort",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1585771724684-38269d6639fd?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
    href: "/en/pack/carry-on/comfort-layer/",
    slug: "comfort-layer",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "electronics-carry-on",
    num: "04",
    topic: "Electronics",
    title: "Electronics &",
    titleEm: "power.",
    desc: "Every lithium battery — power banks, spare camera cells, laptop — goes carry-on or it doesn't fly. Phone, charger, universal adapter, 10 000 mAh bank. Full electronics strategy is in the Electronics sub-hub.",
    count: "See Electronics →",
    read: "Batteries · Adapters",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1505740420928-5e560c06d30e?w=1600&q=80",
    size: "wide",
    href: "/en/pack/electronics/",
    slug: "electronics-carry-on",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "delayed-bag-kit",
    num: "05",
    topic: "Insurance",
    badge: "Pack this first",
    title: "The Delayed-Bag Kit.",
    desc: "One outfit — top, bottom, undergarments. Toothbrush and travel deodorant. Phone charger. That's 48 hours of dignity when your checked bag lands in the wrong city. Airlines reimburse $100/day — file the claim before you leave the baggage hall.",
    count: "4 guides",
    read: "Delayed · Claim",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1553531384-cc64ac80f931?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
    href: "/en/pack/carry-on/delayed-bag-kit/",
    slug: "delayed-bag-kit",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "personal-item-vs-carry-on",
    num: "06",
    topic: "Strategy",
    title: "Personal Item vs Carry-On.",
    desc: "The personal item goes under the seat. The carry-on goes overhead. Every budget carrier enforces this differently — Spirit, Ryanair, and EasyJet all measure with a metal cage at the gate. Know your airline's exact dimensions before you pack.",
    count: "7 guides",
    read: "Airlines · Sizes",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1436491865332-7a61a109cc05?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
    href: "/en/pack/carry-on/personal-item-vs-carry-on/",
    slug: "personal-item-vs-carry-on",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "toiletries-liquids",
    num: "07",
    topic: "Liquids",
    title: "Toiletries &",
    titleEm: "the 100ml rule.",
    desc: "100ml per container, 1-litre clear bag total, one bag per person. Pull it before you reach the belt. Full toiletry kit strategy — what to decant vs what to buy on arrival — lives in the Toiletries sub-hub.",
    count: "See Toiletries →",
    read: "TSA · Liquids",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1556228578-8c89e6adf883?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
    href: "/en/pack/toiletries-and-meds/",
    slug: "toiletries-liquids",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "in-flight-entertainment",
    num: "08",
    topic: "Downtime",
    title: "Book, e-reader,",
    titleEm: "or nothing.",
    desc: "An e-reader holds 4 000 books at 200 g. A paperback weighs 500 g and you'll read 30 pages. Download the episodes before you board — airline Wi-Fi is expensive and unreliable at altitude. One piece of entertainment per leg, intentionally chosen.",
    count: "3 guides",
    read: "Entertainment · Long-haul",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1524995997946-a1c2e315a42f?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "lg",
    href: "/en/pack/carry-on/in-flight-entertainment/",
    slug: "in-flight-entertainment",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "snack-strategy",
    num: "09",
    topic: "Food",
    title: "Snack Strategy.",
    desc: "One real snack — not a granola bar. Nuts, dark chocolate, a piece of fruit that survives a bag. Airline food timing is unreliable; blood sugar at 35 000 feet is not. Solid food through most security; liquids and gels obey the 100ml rule.",
    count: "3 guides",
    read: "Food · Security",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1567620905732-2d1ec7ab7445?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
    href: "/en/pack/carry-on/snack-strategy/",
    slug: "snack-strategy",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "weight-tricks",
    num: "10",
    topic: "Tactics",
    title: "Weight Tricks.",
    desc: "Wear the heaviest items on the plane — boots, jacket, fleece. Carry the dense items — laptop, power bank, camera — on your person or in the personal item. The overhead bin holds volume; your body carries weight for free.",
    count: "5 guides",
    read: "Weight · One-bag",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1476514525535-07fb3b4ae5f1?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
    href: "/en/pack/carry-on/weight-tricks/",
    slug: "weight-tricks",
    zoe: false,
  },
  {
    id: "zoe-carry-on",
    num: "ZO",
    topic: "By Zoe",
    badge: "By Zoe",
    title: "The Carry-On",
    titleEm: "I've been refining for years.",
    desc: "I've packed the same bag into 40-plus countries. I still change one thing every trip. Here's what stayed, what left, and the single item I added last year that I'd now never fly without.",
    count: "Personal essay",
    read: "10 min read",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1488646953014-85cb44e25828?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
    href: "/journal/zoe-carry-on/",
    slug: "zoe-carry-on",
    zoe: true,
  },
];

const CARRY_ON_FAQS = [
  {
    q: "What is the standard carry-on size limit?",
    a: "Most major carriers allow 22 × 14 × 9 inches (56 × 36 × 23 cm) for overhead bin carry-ons and 18 × 14 × 8 inches (45 × 35 × 20 cm) for personal items under the seat. Budget carriers — Ryanair, EasyJet, Spirit, Frontier — are stricter and often enforce these with a metal sizer at the gate. Check your specific airline's current policy when you book. Size limits have been tightening industry-wide and vary carrier by carrier."
  },
  {
    q: "Can I bring a power bank in my carry-on?",
    a: "Yes — and it must go in carry-on, not checked luggage. Lithium batteries of all kinds are prohibited in the cargo hold on most airlines because of fire risk. That includes power banks, spare laptop batteries, and spare camera batteries. Power banks up to 100 Wh (roughly 27 000 mAh) are generally permitted in carry-on without restriction. Between 100–160 Wh requires airline approval. Above 160 Wh is typically prohibited entirely. Check the Wh rating printed on the device, not just the mAh."
  },
  {
    q: "How do I handle prescription medications through security?",
    a: "Keep all prescriptions in their original labeled bottles or packaging. A doctor's letter is not required at most security checkpoints, but it is strongly recommended for controlled substances, injectables (insulin, EpiPens), and anything that looks unusual in an X-ray. Liquid medications in quantities over 100 ml are allowed in carry-on if medically necessary — declare them separately at screening. Never put any medication in checked luggage: if the bag is delayed, you have zero inventory."
  },
  {
    q: "What goes in the personal item versus the carry-on?",
    a: "The personal item — under the seat — should hold everything you need during the flight: your laptop, headphones, medications, snacks, neck pillow, and anything you'll reach for at 35 000 feet. The carry-on — overhead — holds the rest: clothes, shoes, the delayed-bag kit. This separation means you never have to get up during the flight to access the overhead bin, and you can gate-check the carry-on on a full flight without losing access to anything critical."
  },
  {
    q: "Which airlines are strictest about carry-on size?",
    a: "Ryanair and Wizz Air are among the strictest in Europe — they actively gate-check bags that don't fit the metal sizer, and the fee at the gate ($50–$80 per bag) is significantly higher than paying in advance. Spirit and Frontier apply similar logic in the US. Full-service carriers (Delta, United, AA, British Airways, Lufthansa, Emirates) are generally more lenient in practice, though the rules on paper are similar. If you're flying a budget carrier, measure your bag before you leave home."
  },
  {
    q: "What is the airline's delayed bag reimbursement process?",
    a: "File a Property Irregularity Report (PIR) at the baggage office before you leave the airport — not the next day, not online, before you exit arrivals. Ask for the report number and a case reference in writing. Most airlines reimburse $50–$100 per day for essential items (toiletries, one change of clothing) up to a daily maximum. Keep every receipt. The reimbursement process varies by carrier and destination — EU rules (EC 261) are more generous than US rules. The delayed-bag kit in your carry-on buys you 48 hours regardless of what the airline does."
  },
  {
    q: "Can I bring food through airport security?",
    a: "Solid food — nuts, fruit, sandwiches, chocolate, crackers — passes through security in almost every country without restriction. Liquids and gels — yogurt, nut butter, hummus, jam — must comply with the 100 ml per container / 1-litre bag rule in the carry-on. Duty-free liquids purchased after security (in a sealed tamper-evident bag with receipt) are generally permitted even over 100 ml, though this is subject to change on connecting flights through certain countries. When in doubt, buy it after security."
  },
  {
    q: "Do I need to put my laptop in a separate bin at security?",
    a: "In the US: yes, at most TSA checkpoints, laptops and large electronics must be removed from bags and placed in their own bin. In many other countries this is standard practice. Clear TSA PreCheck or Global Entry to skip this step in the US. In the UK (airport security post-Brexit) and most of the EU, the rules are similar to TSA standard. Pack your laptop at the top of your personal item — not buried under three layers of cables — so you can pull it in under 10 seconds without holding up the line."
  },
];

const CARRY_ON_READING = [
  { tag: "Method", duration: "10 min", title: "How to Pack Your Carry-On So You Survive the Long-Haul" },
  { tag: "Documents", duration: "7 min", title: "The Travel Document Checklist", em: "Nothing missing at the gate." },
  { tag: "Strategy", duration: "8 min", title: "Personal Item vs Carry-On", em: "What the airlines actually enforce." },
  { tag: "Health", duration: "6 min", title: "Flying With Medications — A Complete Guide" },
  { tag: "Tactics", duration: "9 min", title: "One-Bag Travel — How to Make It Actually Work" },
  { tag: "By Zoe", duration: "10 min", title: "The Carry-On I've Been Refining for Years", em: "A personal essay." },
];

const CARRY_ON_DECIDE = [
  { q: "Your flight is…", opts: ["Under 3 hours", "3–8 hours", "Long-haul 8–14h", "Ultra-long 14h+"] },
  { q: "You're checking a bag?", opts: ["No — carry-on only", "Yes — one checked", "Yes — checked + carry-on", "Haven't decided"] },
  { q: "Biggest concern is…", opts: ["Comfort on the plane", "Documents & meds", "Bag size limits", "Landing with everything"] },
  { q: "Traveling on…", opts: ["Full-service airline", "Budget carrier (EU)", "Budget carrier (US)", "Multiple airlines"] },
];

Object.assign(window, { CARRY_ON_CARDS, CARRY_ON_FAQS, CARRY_ON_READING, CARRY_ON_DECIDE });
