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The design goals for YAML:

- YAML is easily readable by humans.
- YAML data is portable between programming languages.
- YAML matches the native data structures of agile languages.
- YAML has a consistent model to support generic tools.
- YAML supports one-pass processing.
- YAML is expressive and extensible.
- YAML is easy to implement and use.

Awesome YAML (Ain't Markup Language)

A collection of Awesome YAML (Ain't Markup Language) goodies for structured (meta) data in text.

Contributions welcome. Anything missing? Send in a pull request. Thanks.

Formats

"Standard" YAML

YAML HQ

"Safe" YAML, "Strict" YAML

Nested Text - YAML Simplified, YAML Evolved

"Safer" YAML - YAML Redux

Example:

# Contact information for our officers

president:
    name: Katheryn McDaniel
    address:
        > 138 Almond Street
        > Topeka, Kansas 20697
    phone:
        cell: 1-210-555-5297
        home: 1-210-555-8470
            # Katheryn prefers that we always call her on her cell phone.
    email: KateMcD@aol.com
    additional roles:
        - board member

Articles

Tips & Gotchas

Strings with Colons (:)

When to use quotes for your strings?

If your string includes a colon (:) followed by a space you MUST quote your string. Otherwise, the colon is interpreted as a key/value separator (e.g. key: value). Example:

title: "Text Processing with Ruby: Extract Value from the Data That Surrounds You"
title: "Sinatra: Up and Running - Ruby for the Web, Simply"
title: "Using JRuby: Bringing Ruby to Java"

Note: You can quote your strings using double quotes ("") e.g. "Using JRuby: Bringing Ruby to Java" or single quotes('') e.g. 'Using JRuby: Bringing Ruby to Java'.

No Tabs (\t) for Indentation - Use Spaces, Period

Note: Always use spaces for indentation, period. Make sure no tabs (\t) have somehow ended up in your datafile leading to unexpected results.

Predefined Boolean 'n' No Value Constants - True/False, Yes/No, On/Off, ~/Null

Note: The boolean true and false constants e.g.:

true, True, TRUE
y, Y, yes, YES, YES
on, ON, ON
false, False, FALSE
n, N, no, No, NO
off, Off, OFF

will become boolean values e.g. true or false. If you want end-up with a string e.g.:

recommend: Yes       # note: will become => true (boolean)

make sure you use a quoted version e.g.:

recommend: "Yes"     # note: will become => "Yes" (string)

Note: The same holds for the no value null constants e.g.:

~
null, Null, NULL

will become => null (no value). Note: A key without a value will end-up with a null value (and not an empty string, for example). To get an empty string use "" e.g.:

key1:           # note: value will become => null (no value); same as key1: null  or key1: ~
key2: ""        # note: value will become => "" (string)

JSON

JSON is (a subset of) YAML, that is YAML is JSON but JSON is NOT YAML ;-)

Example: Use the inline style for lists (that is, JSON arrays) and hashes (that is, JSON objects) for an alternative "JSON-style" syntax:

[
  { "title": "football.db - Open Football Data",
    "url":   "https://github.com/openfootball" 
  },
  { "title": "beer.db - Open Beer, Brewery 'n' Brewpub Data",
    "url":   "https://github.com/openbeer" 
  }
]

is the same as:

- title : football.db - Open Football Data
  url   : https://github.com/openfootball
- title : beer.db - Open Beer, Brewery 'n' Brewpub Data
  url   : https://github.com/openbeer

Tools & Services

No Body Wants To Write YAML

No:
  Body:
    Wants:
      To:
        Write:
          - YAML

Mandatory "No Body Wants To Write YAML" reading list:

Misc

Meta

License

The awesome list is dedicated to the public domain. Use it as you please with no restrictions whatsoever.

Questions? Comments?

Post them to the wwwmake forum. Thanks!