Summarize the following:
Read the instructions on the box to find out what temperature this should be. In most cases, it will be around 350°F (177°C). You can use your own from-scratch recipe (white or yellow cake) if you prefer. In this case, preheat the oven to the temperature stated by the recipe. Grease two 8 or 9-inch (20.32 or 22.86-centimeter) cake pans. Line each pan with a circle cut from parchment paper. You need enough batter to make two 8 or 9-inch (20.32 or 22.86-centimeter) cakes. Most boxes will make enough batter to fill two pans. f you are using your own recipe, simply follow the instructions in the recipe. Check the back of your box to find out how many 8 or 9-inch (20.32 or 22.86-centimeter) pans it can fill. Make a second batch, if needed.  Be sure to add the extra ingredients listed on the box—typically, this will be eggs, water, and oil or melted butter. If you are using your own recipe, simply follow the instructions in the recipe. This will allow you to dye the cake different colors for a camo effect. If you are only looking to make a basic cake with camo frosting, skip this step. Set one of the bowls aside and leave it as-is. Color the remaining bowls green, brown, and black, using a separate color for each bowl. Start with ¼ teaspoon of food coloring, then add more if needed.  Use a separate spoon for each bowl so that you don't mix colors. You can also stir a tiny amount of beige food coloring into the remaining white bowl if you'd like a little less contrast. Start with a few small blobs of black batter in both pans. Follow up larger blobs of brown, white, and green batter. Keep layering blobs in both pan simultaneously until the you have used up all the batter. Plan on filling each pan ½ to ⅔ of the way full. Once again, how long this takes depends on the type of cake mix or recipe you are using, so read the instructions carefully. In most cases, this will be about 40 minutes. The cakes are done if a toothpick poked into the center comes out clean. Let the cakes cool in their pans for 10 to 15 minutes first, then remove them. Place the cakes onto a wire rack and let them finish cooling off. Be sure to remove the parchment paper circle if it is stuck to the cake.  The cakes must be completely cool before you frost them; otherwise, the frosting will melt. Give the cakes a nicer finish by sawing off the top bump. Eat the scraps or turn them into cake pops.

summary: Preheat the oven according to the temperature on the boxed mix. Grease the cake pans and line them with parchment paper. Prepare the boxed cake mix following the instructions on the back. Divide the cake batter evenly between 4 bowls. Stir green, brown, and black gel food coloring into the divided batter. Alternate spooning different colors of batter into lightly greased pans. Bake the cakes in a pre-heated oven according to package directions. Allow the cakes to cool before removing them from the pans.


Summarize the following:
Villages can be found in the plains, desert, and Savannah biomes.  The village needs to have at least 2 villagers. Be patient.  Villages are not always easy to find.  You may have explored for a while before you find one.  Use the map you get at the start of the game to keep track of your location. You can also cure zombie villagers by first throwing a Splash Potion of Weakness and then feeding it a golden apple. Make sure it doesn't come into sunlight until the zombie villager has completely transformed, or it will burn up. Villagers will mate as long as the total population of villagers is less than 35% of the number of valid doors (rounded down) in a village. A valid door is any door where one side of the door leads to a room with a roof, while the other side leads to the outside.  To increase the number of doors in your village, you can build a single structure with multiple doors. To add more doors to a village, build a single structure with multiple doors. Villagers love to grow crops.  Most villages already have a couple of gardens already built.  You can build more to make the villagers more likely to be willing to breed.  To build gardens, find a well-lit area and dig a trench next to dirt blocks and fill the trench with water.  Then use a hoe to till the dirt blocks.  You can plant seeds or vegetables in the dirt blocks, or allow the villagers to do it themselves.  You can also throw food to villagers.  Villagers become willing to breed when they have either 3 bread, 12 carrots, or 12 potatoes in their inventory. To craft bread, select a crafting table and place three wheat stalks in any row of the 3x3 grid.  Drag the bread into your inventory. Trading with villagers is the primary way to make them willing to breed. Different villagers have different items they are willing to trade in exchange for a different item.  You must have the items the villager wants in your inventory to trade with them.  Trading with same villager multiple times unlocks new items the villager can trade. Trade with the villager until a new trade appears to make it willing. Afterward, subsequent trades have a 1 in 5 chance of making the villager willing again. Green particles appear when a villager has become willing through trading.  Being willing to make will not automatically make the villager seek out a mate.  Two villagers that are willing to mate must be in close proximity. After they mate, the villagers are no longer willing and must be made willing again.

summary: Find a village. Build more houses with doors in the village. Build gardens for the villagers. Trade with the villagers.


Summarize the following:
You can technically write and run a program in Notepad using any coding language available, but you must save the program in the correct format for the program to run. All Notepad files save as text documents by default. The easiest way to open Notepad is by clicking Start {"smallUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikihow.com\/images\/0\/07\/Windowsstart.png","bigUrl":"\/images\/thumb\/0\/07\/Windowsstart.png\/30px-Windowsstart.png","smallWidth":460,"smallHeight":460,"bigWidth":"30","bigHeight":"30","licensing":"<div class=\"mw-parser-output\"><p>I edited this screenshot of a Windows icon.\n<\/p><p>License: <a rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external text\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Public_domain\">Public Domain<\/a><br>\n<\/p><\/div>"}, typing in notepad, and clicking the blue Notepad icon at the top of the Start window. Notepad doesn't exclude any languages, but you'll need to use the same language throughout the document to remain consistent. If you don't know any programming languages, you can try one of the examples listed in this article. As with most code editors, you'll always need to place new lines of code on a new Notepad line. Whenever you open a bracket or parenthesis (e.g., { or [), you must close it with the opposite-facing counterpart in order to complete a line of code. Failing to do so will result in errors. While you can certainly write entire programs in Notepad, it's definitely not the easiest way—Notepad doesn't contain any syntax highlighting or indentation options, making it difficult to use for writing larger pieces of code.  Notepad++ is a great free option for coding.
summary: Understand Notepad's limitations. Find and open Notepad. Determine your programming language. Press ↵ Enter after you complete a line of code. Close any open brackets and parentheses. Consider using a dedicated code-editing program.