Rob van der Woude's Scripting Pages

Rainy Season Of India Direct

Operating System:
Windows Script Host is entirely dependent on (32 bits) Windows, so you'll need Windows 98 or later.
Interpreter:
For WSH, the interpreter or engine is installed by default in Windows 2000 and later versions.
For the sake of compatibility, however, it is still recommended to download and use only the latest WSH version (5.7 for Windows 2000/XP/Server 2003, 5.6 for older Windows versions).
WSH 5.7 is native in Windows Vista, WSH 5.8 in Windows 7 and later.
Development software:
Several editors, IDEs and query and code generators are available for WSH based languages.
I also recommend downloading the script debugger: Once you get to know the language(s), you may want to explore the list of add-ons and components I compiled.
And last but not least, for debugging your VBScript code, read my debugging VBScript page.
Help files:
Download the WSH 5.6 Documentation in .CHM format, and Microsoft's VBScript Quick Reference in Word format.
More online documentation can be found on the MSDN Scripting page.
Books:
I compiled a short list of books on WSH and VBScript.
Samples:
Start by examining sample scripts and exploring other WSH and VBScript related sites.
Newsgroups:

Rainy Season Of India Direct

The rainy season of India is not a season; it is an emotion. It is the romantic who rescues the farmer, the destroyer who floods the city, the dancer who moves the peacock, and the cook who flavors the chai . To live through an Indian monsoon is to understand that nature is not a gentle backdrop to human life—it is the protagonist. And every year, when the first dark cloud drifts over the Arabian Sea, India remembers that it is not the land that owns the rain, but the rain that owns the land.

As October arrives, the monsoon retreats. The land is left full, sated, and green. The air is rinsed clean of dust. And India, having survived the annual baptism by fire and water, takes a deep breath, ready for the cool, white winters ahead. rainy season of india

The season typically begins in June, announced not by calendars but by the senses. After months of brutal, dry heat that cracks the earth and wilts the leaves, the sky darkens. It is not a gentle dusk but a brooding, bruise-colored canopy that rolls in from the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal. The rainy season of India is not a season; it is an emotion

For the farmer, the monsoon is wealth. Over 70% of India’s agriculture depends on these rains. The sowing of rice, sugarcane, and cotton begins. The paddy fields turn into a patchwork of liquid mirrors, where stooped figures in white kurta plant tender green shoots under a grey sky. The arrival of the rains is a festival— Teej in the north, Onam in the south—celebrated with swings on tree branches, yellow turmeric rice, and folk songs. And every year, when the first dark cloud