// Packing Systems page data
const SYSTEM_CARDS = [
  {
    id: "roll-vs-fold",
    num: "01",
    topic: "The Method",
    badge: "Most debated",
    title: "Roll vs. Fold",
    titleEm: "vs. Bundle.",
    desc: "Rolling wins on volume — 30% more fits in the same space. Folding wins on structure. The bundle method wins on wrinkle control. Pick by fabric, not habit.",
    count: "8 guides",
    read: "Technique · Method",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1553062407-98eeb64c6a62?w=1600&q=80",
    size: "xl",
    href: "/en/pack/packing-systems/roll-vs-fold/",
  },
  {
    id: "packing-cubes",
    num: "02",
    topic: "The Organizer",
    title: "Packing Cubes",
    titleEm: "When they help.",
    desc: "Cubes turn a bag into a four-drawer dresser. Worth every centimeter for multi-stop trips and families. Overhead for single-stop weekends. Here's the math.",
    count: "6 guides",
    read: "Gear · Organization",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1590736969955-71cc94901144?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
    href: "/en/pack/packing-systems/packing-cubes/",
  },
  {
    id: "marie-kondo-file-fold",
    num: "03",
    topic: "The Fold",
    title: "File Fold",
    titleEm: "The KonMari method.",
    desc: "Stand items vertically in the cube so every garment is visible at once. No more rummaging. Designed for drawers; works even better in packing cubes.",
    count: "4 guides",
    read: "Technique · Visibility",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1558618666-fcd25c85cd64?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
    href: "/en/pack/packing-systems/marie-kondo-file-fold/",
  },
  {
    id: "compression-sacks",
    num: "04",
    topic: "The Compressor",
    title: "Compression Sacks",
    desc: "For bulky layers — fleeces, down jackets, and sleeping bag liners. They halve the volume and add negligible weight. The tool for cold-climate packers.",
    count: "4 guides",
    read: "Cold Climate · Gear",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1441974231531-c6227db76b6e?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
    href: "/en/pack/packing-systems/compression-sacks/",
  },
  {
    id: "business-clothes-wrinkle",
    num: "05",
    topic: "The Dress Code",
    title: "Business Travel",
    titleEm: "Wrinkle-proof.",
    desc: "The bundle wrap method for blazers. Dry-cleaning bags under dress shirts. The one garment that should always hang on the hook at the hotel room door.",
    count: "5 guides",
    read: "Business · Smart-Casual",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1507003211169-0a1dd7228f2d?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "wide",
    href: "/en/pack/packing-systems/business-clothes-wrinkle/",
  },
  {
    id: "bag-orientation",
    num: "06",
    topic: "The Architecture",
    title: "Load Orientation",
    titleEm: "Top-load vs. side-load.",
    desc: "Wheeled bags: heavy items at the bottom (wheels-end), shoes at the spine, soft items on top. Backpacks: weight rides high and close to your back. The physics matter.",
    count: "5 guides",
    read: "Technique · Weight",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1565026057447-bc90a3dceb87?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
    href: "/en/pack/packing-systems/bag-orientation/",
  },
  {
    id: "toiletry-zone",
    num: "07",
    topic: "The Zones",
    title: "Three Zones",
    titleEm: "Toiletries, laundry, just-in-case.",
    desc: "Every bag needs three separated zones: the clean-daily zone, the dirty-laundry zone (a packing cube doubles as a hamper), and the just-in-case zone you pray you never open.",
    count: "5 guides",
    read: "System · Organization",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1581553680321-4fffae59fccd?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "lg",
    href: "/en/pack/packing-systems/toiletry-zone/",
  },
  {
    id: "returning-home",
    num: "08",
    topic: "The Return",
    title: "Packing Home",
    titleEm: "The reverse pack.",
    desc: "Dirty laundry zone first. Souvenirs wrapped in worn clothing. The 20% rule: you should have empty space left — if not, you overpacked or overshopped. Both are fixable.",
    count: "3 guides",
    read: "Return · Method",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1436491865332-7a61a109cc05?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
    href: "/en/pack/packing-systems/returning-home/",
  },
  {
    id: "zoe-cube-system",
    num: "09",
    topic: "By Zoe",
    badge: "By Zoe",
    title: "The Cube Sort",
    titleEm: "Zoe's 8-week system.",
    desc: "After 8 consecutive weeks on the road, Zoe cracked a cube-sorting system that means she never repacks from scratch. One cube never moves. Here's why.",
    count: "1 deep-dive",
    read: "Field Notes · UGC",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1503220317375-aaad61436b1b?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
    href: "/journal/zoe-cube-system/",
    isZoe: true,
  },
];

const SYSTEM_FAQS = [
  {
    q: "Does rolling really fit 30% more than folding?",
    a: "Yes, in independent packing tests across multiple bag sizes and garment types. Rolling works by eliminating air pockets between layered garments. The exact gain ranges from 22% to 38% depending on the fabric — synthetics and knits compress the most. Structured cotton and suiting compress the least; for those, folding with a dry-cleaning bag liner is the better method.",
  },
  {
    q: "Are packing cubes worth it if I'm only doing carry-on for a weekend?",
    a: "Probably not. For a two-night trip, the overhead of loading and unloading cubes into a small bag is real and the organization benefit is low — the bag is tiny, you can see everything anyway. The calculus flips at five nights or three stops. If you're in and out of your bag multiple times per day (road trips, multi-city), cubes pay for themselves by day two.",
  },
  {
    q: "What's the correct orientation for a wheeled suitcase?",
    a: "Heaviest items at the bottom (the wheel-end, when standing upright). Shoes against the bag's spine — they're rigid and create a structural wall. Soft items fill the middle. Delicates on top. When the bag is laid flat in the overhead bin, your heaviest items are across the long axis, which distributes weight evenly and protects soft items from pressure. Most people load from the top down; load from the wheel end up instead.",
  },
  {
    q: "How do I keep dress shirts wrinkle-free in a carry-on?",
    a: "Three options in order of effectiveness. First: the bundle method — lay the shirt flat, stack others on top, wrap the bundle around a soft core (rolled socks, underwear). Wrinkles concentrate at the center where they're hidden. Second: individual dry-cleaning bags. The plastic creates a slipping layer that prevents crease-setting. Third: roll with the collar facing out, not in. If you arrive with unavoidable wrinkles, hang the shirt in a hot shower for 15 minutes — steam sets creases out faster than an iron for most fabrics.",
  },
  {
    q: "What goes in the dirty laundry zone?",
    a: "One packing cube, designated from day one, lives in the corner of the bag and collects worn items. It works as a hamper, keeps clean and dirty separated, and makes packing home faster — you're not sorting at checkout, you're just zipping. A mesh cube is ideal (it breathes). When the cube is full, it tells you it's laundry day — a natural prompt. Change the habit from 'I'll deal with it when I unpack' to 'the cube handles it as I go.'",
  },
  {
    q: "What is the just-in-case zone and what goes in it?",
    a: "A small secondary pocket or corner of the bag reserved for items you might need but hope not to. Standard contents: one change of underwear in case the checked bag is delayed, a decanted 100ml hand sanitizer, a collapsible tote bag, two ibuprofen, one blister plaster, a safety pin, and a universal power adapter. The key rule: it should never be full. If you're packing six just-in-case items, five of them should be moved to the 'stays home' pile.",
  },
  {
    q: "How do I unpack on arrival — fully or live out of the bag?",
    a: "If you're staying three or more nights, fully unpack into drawers. The ritual of unpacking is a psychological anchor — it tells your nervous system you've arrived, not just landed. For two nights or fewer, unpack only what you'll need that evening and leave the rest packed. Living out of the bag for two nights is fine; living out of the bag for ten nights creates the particular exhaustion of permanent transit. Unpack when you stay.",
  },
];

const SYSTEM_ESSAY = {
  pull: "\"The argument over rolling versus folding is older than rolling luggage itself — and mostly misses the point. The real system is knowing which method wins at which job.\"",
  byline: {
    name: "Iris Mendoza",
    role: "Senior Editor · Pack Desk",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1607746882042-944635dfe10e?w=200&q=80",
  },
  body: [
    "People come to the Pack desk asking which is better: rolling or folding, cubes or no cubes, compression or none. The honest answer is that every method wins at a specific job — and the whole system collapses when you apply the wrong method to the wrong garment.",
    "Rolling wins on volume. A tightly rolled t-shirt compresses to roughly 60% of its folded height and creates no dead air gaps. For a bag that's already tight, rolling a week of t-shirts and trousers can free up enough space for an extra layer or a pair of shoes. The gain is real; the tests are consistent.",
    "Folding — specifically the bundle method — wins on wrinkle control for structured garments. A dress shirt rolled tightly will set a crease across the collar. The same shirt folded into a bundle around a soft core distributes the fold stress at the seams, where it's invisible. Business travelers who roll their shirts are creating work for the hotel iron.",
    "Cubes win on living. Not on compression. Not on fitting more. On the experience of actually using a bag over seven or fourteen days. A bag with four cubes is four drawers. A bag without cubes is a box you rummage through twice a day. The organizational dividend compounds with trip length — it's marginal on a weekend, it's transformative on three weeks.",
  ],
};

const SYSTEM_READING = [
  { tag: "Method", duration: "11 min", title: "How to Pack a Two-Week Trip into One Carry-On" },
  { tag: "Gear", duration: "7 min", title: "The Best Packing Cubes, Tested over 40 Trips" },
  { tag: "Business", duration: "8 min", title: "How to Pack a Suit Without a Garment Bag", em: "(And Arrive Unwrinkled.)" },
  { tag: "System", duration: "9 min", title: "The Three-Zone Method: Clean, Dirty, Just-in-Case" },
  { tag: "Field Notes", duration: "6 min", title: "Zoe's 8-Week Rolling Cube System, Explained" },
  { tag: "Return", duration: "5 min", title: "How to Pack for the Trip Home Before You Leave" },
];

const SYSTEM_DECIDE = [
  { q: "Trip length…", opts: ["1–3 nights", "4–7 nights", "8–14 nights", "3+ weeks"] },
  { q: "Bag type…", opts: ["Backpack", "Carry-on roller", "Checked roller", "Duffel"] },
  { q: "Wardrobe…", opts: ["All casual", "Smart-casual", "Business formal", "Mixed"] },
  { q: "Stops on this trip…", opts: ["One city", "Two cities", "Three or more", "Moving daily"] },
];

const SYSTEM_RECOMMEND = [
  { label: "Roll Everything", desc: "Your trip is casual and short. Roll tight, no cubes needed. Fastest load and unload." },
  { label: "Roll + Cubes", desc: "Multi-stop casual or 7+ nights. Cubes organize the rolling; you'll thank yourself on day 4." },
  { label: "Bundle + Cubes", desc: "Business or smart-casual. Bundle structured garments; cube everything else." },
  { label: "Full Cube System", desc: "Long trip, three or more stops, mixed wardrobe. Four cubes minimum. The cube IS the system." },
];

Object.assign(window, {
  SYSTEM_CARDS,
  SYSTEM_FAQS,
  SYSTEM_ESSAY,
  SYSTEM_READING,
  SYSTEM_DECIDE,
  SYSTEM_RECOMMEND,
});
