• Jim
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    1 year ago

    I think yaml was a perfectly fine way to express a hash/dict like config. I am surprised that toml was so widely adopted by the community.

    • @carl_the_grackle
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      71 year ago

      Yaml is fine until you want to abbreviate Norway and get false… toml doesn’t handle everything well but at least it doesn’t have insane problems like that.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        While that shouldn’t happen with a current-spec YAML parser, I agree even the current spec does way too much with types.

        I’ve come to love NestedText’s approach of leaving all type handling to the ingesting code.

        • Jason NovingerM
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          31 year ago

          You should make a post about NestedText. That looks interesting and pretty close to my own internal note-taking style.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Would you suggest a topic or tooling to pair with it, so I can provide a good demo for working with it in a real and useful context?

            I made a CLI tool for working with it but want to avoid making a look-at-me spammy post, and I think the NestedText site itself explains the ideas pretty well already.

            • Jason NovingerM
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              31 year ago

              First, I have to apologize, I just meant post a link to NestText as a post in c/Python. I definitely didn’t mean to imply you should have to go write a blog post (or something) about it just for me. I swear this was just an attempt to get another person posting interesting things to c/Python. 😬

              Looking through the community projects and docs, the use cases/tooling that really stood out to me were:

              Thinking about how I might use it:

    • GTG3000
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      61 year ago

      As someone who had tried to wrap their mind around YAML spec…

      Fuck yaml. It is ridiculous how much junk there is in that spec.