(long time lurker, first time poster)
chris_notts wrote: ↑Fri Dec 21, 2018 5:27 am
Depends what you care about, I guess, and how deep down the rabbit hole you want to go.[...]
In my experience, going deeper down the rabbit hole is just something that happens, if I want it to or not. And the deeper I go, the more difficult it tends to get. There's always another tunnel to explore, usually leading to a complex maze of burrows.
Another difficulty is in resisting the temptation to make everything too logical, or coming up with too many distinct ways to express subtle differences in meaning. 'Real' languages don't seem to work like that, are usually more ambiguous. So why shouldn't my conlang be (unless it was my intention to develop a logical conlang)?
I've found out that trying to develop a conlang by using a structured or 'waterfall' approach (for example: first flesh out the phonology, then the morphology, then cases, conjugations, then syntax) pins me down too much on choices I made earlier in the process. The further I get, the harder it gets to backtrack and revert something. So, for now I just use a log-style development approach: I write down every thought or idea that occurs to me, no matter if it contradicts something I decided upon earlier on (if it does contradict some earlier decisions, that's a good indication that that decision wasn't right or satisfying enough to begin with). That also helps me to stop mulling over ideas in my head. Just write it down, and move on to the next idea. Once that becomes stable enough, a could always decide to use a more structured approach to describe my conlang.