// Itineraries page data
const ITINERARIES_LANES = [
  {
    id: "three-day",
    num: "01",
    topic: "The Micro-Trip",
    badge: "Most booked",
    title: "3-Day",
    titleEm: "Trips.",
    desc: "Weekenders with one extra day. Enough time to arrive properly, go somewhere that matters, and leave before you've worn out your welcome.",
    count: "48 guides",
    read: "6 new this season",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1467269204594-9661b134dd2b?w=1600&q=80",
    size: "xl",
  },
  {
    id: "one-week",
    num: "02",
    topic: "The Sweet Spot",
    badge: "Most planned",
    title: "1-Week",
    titleEm: "Trips.",
    desc: "The most-planned length for a reason. Long enough to settle in, short enough to hold a shape. Seven days is where most itineraries find their grammar.",
    count: "86 guides",
    read: "Flagship · Classic",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1476514525535-07fb3b4ae5f1?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "lg",
  },
  {
    id: "ten-day",
    num: "03",
    topic: "The Extension",
    title: "10-Day",
    titleEm: "Trips.",
    desc: "One extra weekend bolted onto a week. Enough room for a second city, a slower final chapter, or a day you hadn't planned for.",
    count: "39 guides",
    read: "Dual-city · Deep dives",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1513635269975-59663e0ac1ad?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
  },
  {
    id: "two-week",
    num: "04",
    topic: "The Proper Trip",
    title: "2-Week",
    titleEm: "Trips.",
    desc: "Proper trips. Multi-city is possible, multi-country is reasonable, and you finally have the days to do a place right rather than just check it.",
    count: "52 guides",
    read: "Multi-city · Classic",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501854140801-50d01698950b?w=1600&q=80",
    size: "wide",
  },
  {
    id: "three-week",
    num: "05",
    topic: "Upper Edge",
    title: "3-Week",
    titleEm: "Trips.",
    desc: "The upper edge of vacation, the lower edge of slow travel. You stop optimizing and start inhabiting. One city per week is about right.",
    count: "27 guides",
    read: "Slow · Immersive",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1682687982501-1e58ab814714?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
  },
  {
    id: "one-month",
    num: "06",
    topic: "Slow Travel",
    title: "1-Month+",
    titleEm: "Trips.",
    desc: "Sabbaticals, long-stays, slow travel. The pace changes. You start noticing the weather pattern, the neighborhood rhythms, the baker who knows your order.",
    count: "19 guides",
    read: "Sabbatical · Long-stay",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1560179707-f14e90ef3623?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
  },
  {
    id: "multi-city",
    num: "07",
    topic: "Two+ Cities",
    title: "Multi-City",
    titleEm: "Routes.",
    desc: "Two cities or more in one trip — sequenced so the contrast does the work. The right order matters more than the number of stops.",
    count: "34 guides",
    read: "Routing · Transfers",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523906834658-6e24ef2386f9?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "sm",
  },
  {
    id: "rtw",
    num: "08",
    topic: "Multi-Continent",
    badge: "The long way",
    title: "Round the",
    titleEm: "World.",
    desc: "RTW tickets, multi-continent routes, the trip where the map is the point. Built for people doing it once and doing it properly.",
    count: "14 guides",
    read: "RTW · Alliance tickets",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1530789253388-582c481c54b0?w=1200&q=80",
    size: "md",
  },
];

const ITINERARIES_FAQS = [
  { q: "How do I know which trip length is right for me?", a: "Start with what you have, not what you want. If you have eight days, you're not planning a two-week trip — you're planning a one-week trip with breathing room. Then ask what the destination actually needs. Japan rewards ten days. A long weekend in Lisbon is perfect. The length and the place should agree with each other." },
  { q: "Is a 1-week trip actually enough for somewhere like Japan?", a: "A week is the minimum that makes sense in Japan — enough for Tokyo plus a day in Kyoto if you're efficient. Ten days is better. Two weeks is right. The country is deep enough that it rewards more time, but a week is far from wasted, especially if you stay in one region." },
  { q: "What's the real difference between a 2-week and a 3-week trip?", a: "Two weeks has a shape — usually two destinations, a beginning and an end. Three weeks loses the urgency. You stop counting days and start counting weeks. That sounds like a good thing, and it is, but only if the place rewards it. Three weeks in one city is slow travel. Three weeks across four countries is a sprint." },
  { q: "How do I plan a multi-city trip without it feeling like a sprint?", a: "The rule is: two nights minimum anywhere, three preferred. One night is a transit stop, not a stay. Build the route around train or short-flight connections — the less you fight geography, the more you inhabit the places you stop. And resist the pull of the map. More pins does not mean a better trip." },
  { q: "Do I need an RTW ticket for a round-the-world trip?", a: "No. Alliance RTW tickets (Star Alliance, oneworld, SkyTeam) make sense if you're crossing three or more continents and your routing is roughly east-to-west or west-to-east. For anything more bespoke — mixed directions, budget carriers in specific regions — piecing it together leg by leg often costs less and gives you more control. We cover both approaches in the RTW guides." },
];

// Replaces Roundtrips section: The Itinerary Builder — curated tools feature section
const BUILDER_PANELS = [
  {
    tag: "LENGTH",
    title: "Start with days, not destinations.",
    desc: "The trip length is the frame. Once you know the frame — three days, a week, a month — everything else becomes a question of what fits inside it.",
  },
  {
    tag: "SEQUENCING",
    title: "Order matters more than stops.",
    desc: "Where you start and where you end changes the entire experience. A trip that ends in a city is different from one that ends on a coast. Sequence before you pin.",
  },
  {
    tag: "PACING",
    title: "One hard rule: two nights minimum.",
    desc: "One night anywhere is a transit stop. Two nights is the minimum to actually be somewhere. Three is when you stop navigating and start noticing.",
  },
  {
    tag: "TRANSITIONS",
    title: "Build in arrival days.",
    desc: "Day one is rarely a sightseeing day. Factor an arrival buffer — especially on long-haul trips. The itinerary that starts on day two is almost always better.",
  },
  {
    tag: "FLEXIBILITY",
    title: "Leave one day unwritten.",
    desc: "Every good itinerary has a blank day. Not laziness — margin. That's the day you follow something you found on day three, or rest after you pushed too hard on day five.",
  },
];

const ITINERARIES_DECIDE = [
  { q: "Days you actually have…", opts: ["2–3", "5–7", "10–14", "3+ weeks"] },
  { q: "Travel style…", opts: ["Focused", "Varied", "Slow", "Exhaustive"] },
  { q: "City count preferred…", opts: ["One only", "Two is fine", "Three max", "Doesn't matter"] },
  { q: "Pace pressure…", opts: ["Tight schedule", "Some flex", "Very loose", "No agenda"] },
];

const ITINERARIES_READING = [
  { tag: "Method", duration: "9 min", title: "How to Pick a Trip Length" },
  { tag: "Planning", duration: "7 min", title: "The Case for One City, One Week", em: "" },
  { tag: "Multi-city", duration: "11 min", title: "Sequencing a Multi-City Route" },
  { tag: "RTW", duration: "14 min", title: "Round-the-World Tickets, Demystified" },
  { tag: "Slow Travel", duration: "8 min", title: "What a Month Actually Feels Like" },
  { tag: "Micro-trips", duration: "6 min", title: "The Art of the 72-Hour Trip" },
];

Object.assign(window, {
  ITINERARIES_LANES,
  ITINERARIES_FAQS,
  BUILDER_PANELS,
  ITINERARIES_DECIDE,
  ITINERARIES_READING,
});
