• @Gecko
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    331 year ago

    YAML would such a nice language for config files but then it turns out that “no” is falsy and so a list of Scandinavian countries turns from

    • se
    • fi
    • no

    into

    • “se”
    • “fi”
    • False

    I wish there was like a JSON5 equivalent for YAML that just reduces its scope lol
    (and no, TOML also looks ugly :P)

      • @dafo
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        1 year ago

        S W E D E N

        S W E D E N

        S W E D E N

    • synae[he/him]
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      111 year ago

      This is definitely a failing of yaml. Though, I feel that generally it’s the sort of thing you learn once the hard way, then it sticks with you pretty well.

      Also I’m glad there are more anti-toml folks are out there, feels like I’m taking crazy pills when people say it is “simple” and “elegant”. IMO it’s uglier than old-school ini format - at least it’s more strictly defined but that doesn’t really sway me to convert

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        Which is better for structured data?

        • elegant, human readable, indentation sensitive language that’s great for deep nesting but has some weird idiosyncrasies with some dynamically typed parsers being too smart for their own good
        • glorified ini

        The choice is clear

      • @orangeboats
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        31 year ago

        TOML isn’t elegant at all but damn, it is really simple.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        If by simple you mean “can’t count from 1 to 10 in a loop” and by elegant you mean “easier to understand than a one line perl script” then sure…

      • @Gecko
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        11 year ago

        Looks interesting, I’ll check it out, thanks :D