The Nassi-Shneiderman area-subdividing flowchart lent itself to calligraphic displays and the interactions they enabled. I (Ward) wrote such an editor over a semester with only 20 minutes a week access to the machine for debugging.
From Technical Contributions, Sigplan Notices, 1973.
I coded in fortran through the week checking for syntax errors with compile-only runs on the campus computer. I cross-compiled to the Imlac PDS-1 with a locally developed compiler that only ran on the co-located PDP-11. Compilation took the better part of my one hour reservation. It was slow but it never let me down.
I approached each week with specific coding goals in mind with short-term tests leading towards longer-term goals. I was building an interactive tool and had to assess my success by interacting with it. One early addition was filtering the mouse coordinates. See Track Dampening
I also designed program diagnostics that could show how and why the program behaved as it did by selectively printing internal state in response to keypad requests.