• Brosplosion@lemmy.zip
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    7 hours ago

    I will die on the hill that XML is a superior config format and people are just afraid of it cause they see the advanced features (that you don’t need to use) and think it’s too complicated.

    • bitwolf@sh.itjust.works
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      7 hours ago

      I’d have a much easier time with XML if I could feed it a json schema or something similar so my editor knows the format it should be in.

    • Asetru@feddit.org
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      7 hours ago

      Then maybe you should go ahead and write a brutally messed up but somehow ubiquitous scripting language that just somehow has its object instanciations look exactly like xml so those files can be imported right into scripts that then somehow turn into full blown server applications so xml gets the same attention as Json.

        • Asetru@feddit.org
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          4 hours ago

          I’m so looking forward to it.

          Don’t forget to add a “package management” service that at first glance makes importing XMLlamascript modules super easy but at second glance takes down the Internet after you piss off a random maintainer before then turning into a malware distribution engine.

    • _stranger_@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      The very minor and nitpicky problem is that if you want JSON just use JSON. there’s still a place in the world for human readable/ editable configs that don’t require linters to be run on them after. (Current TOML is fine, I like it).

    • Fmstrat@lemmy.world
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      51 minutes ago

      I love JSON. But I really wish there was a standard that allowed commas with no following items and that there was a syntax for comments.

      • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        They were chucked out because, according to the guy who defined it, people started using them for parsing directives, which hurt interoperability because now you needed to be sure that the parser would both read the comments and interpret them correctly. Suddenly, those comments might make otherwise identical files parse differently. If the whole point is that it’s reliable and machine-readable, keeping it to the minimal set of features and not extending it any way whatsoever is a good way to ensure compatibility.

        What you can do is define some property for comments. It’s not standardised, but you could do stuff like

        {
          "//": "This is a common marker for comments",
          "#": "I've never seen that as a property name, so it might be safe?",
          "_comment": "Property names with underscore for technical fields seem common enough as well, and it's semantically explicit about its purpose"
        }
        
        • AlexanderTheDead@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          I’m not a real programmer but I was wondering wtf you’re on about because I don’t think I’ve ever worked with a json file in a system that didn’t use // for comments lmfao

        • The_Decryptor@aussie.zone
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          1 day ago

          And also, JSON was intended as a data serialisation format, and it’s not like computers actually get value from the comments, they’re just wasted space.

          People went on to use JSON for human readable configuration files, and instantly wanted to add comments, rather than reconsider their choice because the truth is that JSON isn’t a good configuration format.

          • BorgDrone@feddit.nl
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            1 day ago

            JSON was intended as a data serialisation format

            Why then use a inefficient text based format instead of a much more efficient and easy to parse binary format?

            Just use DER encoded ASN.1 like a normal person.

          • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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            1 day ago

            People went on to use JSON for human readable configuration files

            Speaking from my own experience, “I could also use this for…” seems to be a ubiquitous programmer affliction. Single-purpose tools that are great at their thing tend to be short-lived unicorns until someone starts sticking other parts onto them for additional functionalities, taking off the horn because it’s in the way for some thing or other, and somehow we end up with yet another multi-function-tool that does a lot of things poorly.

    • marcos@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Well…

      It’s name-value pairs, with groups denoted by balanced brackets. It’s close to as good as you can get for one kind of data serialization.

      What is impressive is how many problems people manage to fit in something so small.

    • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      That’s not JSON. Note the use of equal signs for the property names. That’s something else.

      • ulterno@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        Equals schmequals.
        It could be a and it would be the same as JSON because it is still a single symbol used as a separator.

        a distinction without a difference

        Now, if it took multiple separators, each giving some specific different meaning, then it would be a something else.

        • jcorvera@quokk.au
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          2 days ago

          It could be a ⇨ and it would be the same as JSON because it is still a single symbol used as a separator.

          Nah, that’s a Ruby Hash…

        • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          None of what you said makes any sense.

          This is the equivalent of an anti-vaxxer denouncing vaccines because they feel that their herbs are close enough to real medicine. 🤦‍♂️

          Don’t do that. Syntax absolutely matters.

          • ulterno@programming.dev
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            2 days ago
            #define EQUAL_TO =
            

            Look! I made a new programming language!


            1. Vaccines are not medicine. They are a more refined form of older (much dirtier and dangerous) practices of sharing sick people’s blood to create group immunity. I’m pretty thankful of not having to do the latter.
            2. No, herbs are far from factory produced, chemically engineered medicine.
            • Most usages of herbs are defined in a way that it acts much closer to cooking. Also most of the herbs used in everyday cooking have medicinal and detoxifying properties, which is 1 of the ways food recipes have developed the way they do.
            • Herbal medicine is much milder than the extremely refined medicine produced using modern methods
              • Hence, they are much slower to act and you need to be using them much earlier than what you can manage with modern ones
              • Hence, there is much less overdose related problems
            • Most herbal medicine tend to have multiple effects. This is in contrast with modern medicine, where extra effects tend to be mostly undesirable and detrimental
              • Hence, herbal medicine is a better choice for regular, low intensity problems, like the flu and what-not, rather than popping Paracetamol every time your temp goes 1℉ over the baseline.
            • Herbal medicine works along with nutrition. This means, it is much harder to develop a tolerance to it in a way that would make it harder for it to work in the future.
            • lad@programming.dev
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              2 days ago

              You seem to have had something like mint and thyme in mind as an example of herbal medicine, but try to substitute something like marijuana and nightshade to see that your description doesn’t fit all of the herbs. The only thing I agree is that effects often come coupled and you have to do something to isolate necessary ones.

              • ulterno@programming.dev
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                2 days ago

                While marijuana and nightshade (and coffee) would be herbal “medicine” substitute for MDMA, DMT, nicotine, cocaine etc,
                the others you mentioned would be a substitute for Chlorpheniramine Maleate, phenylpropanolamine and the likes.

                So if a herbal medicine doctor is prescribing you marijuana for cough and cold, you can perhaps consider it being a quack. Same for someone prescribing SSRIs to a functioning adult that works 40 hours a week, on their first visit.

    • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      The json spec is not versioned. There were two changes to it in 2005 (the removal of comments

      See, this is why we can’t have nice things.

    • onlyhalfminotaur@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Almost all of those issues are solved by explicitly quoting your strings, the author even acknowledges that. Yeah it’s annoying that yaml lets you do otherwise, but the title is a bit dramatic.

      • droans@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Or by configuring your parser.

        I do agree there are plenty of annoyances that shouldn’t exist in YAML but do because someone had an opinionated belief at one point, though. For example, it shouldn’t try to guess that “yes”, “no”, “y”, and “n” are truthy values. Let the programmer handle that. If they write true/false, then go ahead and consider those truthy. Times can also be a bit of a pain - iirc writing 12:00 is supposed to be interpreted as 0.5 - but at least that’s something you can work around.

        But there’s plenty in that article that are only problems because the writer made them problems. Every language lets you make mistakes, markup languages aren’t any different. It’s not a bad thing that you can write strings without quotes. It’s not forcing you to do so. Anchors also make it simple to reuse YAML and they’re completely optional. The issue with numbers (1.2 stays as 1.2 while 1.2.3 becomes "1.2.3" is very nitpicky. It’s completely reasonable for it to try to treat numbers as numbers where it can. If type conversion is that big of an issue for you, then I really doubt you know what you’re doing.

        On top of all this, YAML is just a superset of JSON. You can literally just paste JSON into your YAML file and it’ll process it just fine.

        I’m not saying it’s perfect, but if you want something that’s easy to read and write, even for people who aren’t techy, YAML is probably the best option.

      • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        Coming from powershell scripting, every string is put in quotes and to be printed strings with variables are put in $($var) (e.g. Write-Host "Example-Issue: $($IssueVariable)")
        Saves me the trouble of hoping that $($IssueVariable) isnt interpreted as a string by PowerShell.

  • panda_abyss@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    If yaml didn’t have anchors and 8 different white space formats, it’d be a great replacement for this kind of thing.

    But yaml is a mess, and you’d think you could parse it easily, but you can’t.

  • Michal@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    I like this. I also like yaml, I’ve had very few issues with it and it’s nicer to work with than json.

    Json’s lack of support for trailing commas and comments makes it very annoying for everyday use.

    • backgroundcow@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Just the other day I had a list show up as [“a”, “b”, “c”, “d”, “e”, false, “g”, “h”, “i”].

      The issue was that, without me being overly aware of it, the data was going through a data -> yaml -> data step.

      Yes, the data -> yaml filter was broken for not putting general strings in quotes. But IMO the yaml design invites these odd “rare” bugs.

      I used to like yaml, but was happy to see Toml taking the niche of human-readable-JSON, but felt the format for nested key-value was a weird choice. However, I’ve always felt we could just have extended JSON a bit (allow line breaks, comments, if the outermost data type is an object, the curly brackets may be omitted).

      • droans@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Like the other person said, that’s not really YAML’s fault - just whoever decided to use YAML there.

        If users aren’t intended to interact directly with the data, use JSON.

      • Ethan@programming.dev
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        16 hours ago

        Using YAML as an intermediate format between steps of a process is a mistake. I love YAML for configuration but I’d never use it for machine-to-machine anything. If the tool you’re feeding data to requires YAML as input, just give it JSON. All JSON is valid YAML.

        Edit: I realize you weren’t the one who made that decision. I’m saying the problem isn’t YAML, the problem is someone using YAML inappropriately.

        • backgroundcow@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          I completely agree with the general assessment, but then there are always pesky exceptions. In this case the list entered a JavaScript frontend from the yaml header of machine generated content pages for the website framework Hugo. And, of course, after finding the bug, it is clear that things could have been done differently and the issue easily avoided, but I also don’t think this was a completely unreasonable design. Since Hugo actually supports JSON headers (not just via the yaml parser, but thanks for that tip!), that was a quick fix. But I’m also somewhat amazed that it was possible for the strung-together fairly standard set of Python libraries (primarily pyyaml) to not get the strings properly quoted.

  • Solemarc@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    If this is where the toml train ends I will be happy with it. If they do a yaml, I will be very upset.

  • AnyOldName3@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    TOML’s design is based on the idea that INI was a good format. This was always going to cause problems, as INI was never good, and never a format. In reality, it was hundreds of different formats people decided to use the same file extension for, all with their own incompatible quirks and rarely any ability to identify which variant you were using and therefore which quirks would need to be worked around.

    The changes in the third panel were inevitable, as people have data with nested structure that they’re going to want to represent, and without significant whitespace, TOML was always going to need some kind of character to delimit nesting.

  • arcine@jlai.lu
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    2 days ago

    Nix is the next step in that evolution. It’s basically just JSON that can generate itself !

    • KindaABigDyl@programming.dev
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      It’s basically just JSON that can generate itself !

      You have inspired me.

      I will make JSON with meta-programming

      I will call it DyJSON, i.e. “Dynamic JSON” but pronounced “Die, Jason!”

      It is JSON with meta-programming and the ability to call C functions from libraries

      Example:

      # This is a line comment
      
      # Put your function definitions up here
      (concat str_a str_b: "concat" "my-lib.so") # Import a function through a C ABI
      (make-person first_name last_name email -> { # Define our own generative func
          "name": (concat (concat $first_name " ") $last_name),
          "email": $email
      })
      
      # And then the JSON part which uses them
      [
          (make-person "Jenny" "Craig" "jenn.craig.420@hotmail.com"),
          (make-person "Parson" "Brown" null)
      ]
      

      As you can see, it is also a LISP to some degree

      Is there a need for this? A purpose? No. But some things simply should exist

      Thank you for helping bring this language into existence

      • KindaABigDyl@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        Here is the grammar:

        <json> ::=              <value> | <fn-def> <json>
        <value> ::=             <object> | <array> | <string> | <number> | <bool>
                                | <fn-def> | <fn-app>
                                | "null"
        <object> ::=            "{" [ <member> { "," <member> } ] "}"
        <member> ::=            <string> ":" <value>
        <string> ::=            "\"" { <char> } "\""
        <char> ::=              (ASCII other than "\"", "\\", 0-31, 127-159)
                                | (Unicode other than ASCII)
                                | ( "\\" (
                                    "\"" | "\\" | "/" | "b" | "f" | "n" | "r" | "t"
                                    | "u" <hex> <hex> <hex> <hex>
                                )
        <hex> ::=               /A-Fa-f0-9/
        <array> ::=             "[" [ <value> { "," <value> } ] "]"
        <number> ::=            <integer> [ <fraction> ] [ <exponent> ]
        <integer> ::=           "0" | /[1-9]+/ | "-" <integer>
        <fractional> ::=        "." /[0-9]+/
        <exponent> ::=          ("E" | "e") [ "-" | "+" ] /[0-9]+/
        <bool> ::=              "true" | "false"
        <fn-def> ::=            "(" <ident> { <ident> }
                                    ("->" <value> | ":" <string> <string>) ")"
        <ident> ::=             <startc> { <identc> }
        <startc> ::=            /A-Za-z_/ or non-ASCII Unicode
        <identc> ::=            <startc> | /[0-9-]/
        <fn-app> ::=            "(" <ident> { <value> } ")"
        <var> ::=               "$" <ident>