pyyaml
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pyyaml | cue | |
---|---|---|
16 | 108 | |
2,428 | 4,754 | |
1.4% | 2.3% | |
3.5 | 9.7 | |
16 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | Go | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
pyyaml
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Cython 3.0 Released
PyYAML knew about the breakage since january 2022[0], and nothing really happened. After a year and a half with lots of alphas and betas, I don't think there is much cython could do, short of fixing PyYAML themselves.
[0]: https://github.com/yaml/pyyaml/issues/601
- Cython v3 release breaking PyYAML install well used in Python ecosystem
- Cython and pyyaml is breaking many builds
- I'm needing a hand, I do not understand some (seemingly) simple Python stuff.
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is there any difference between using string.format() or an fstring?
They did finally change the default, in PyYAML 6, after many many bugs pointing out that their previous approach is broken (including one by yours truly), so the default is now safe.
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Using Rust to not have to touch Yaml in k8s land
Note some parsers, most notably pyyaml are still at yaml 1.1, because 13 years is just not enough time to update it.
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JSON is not a YAML subset
That part of the YAML 1.2 spec is in conflict with reality, though. The base of YAML 1.1 documents is large enough that a backwards-incompatible change to default behavior is for practical purposes impossible.
YAML 1.1 was released in 2005, and 1.2 in 2009 -- only four years later. But here we are, in 2022, and YAML 1.1 is still the default (in many cases, only) version supported. That's why the "Norway problem" persists -- it's not possible for the parser to know whether an un-versioned YAML document containing "a: no" should parse the same as {"a": false} or {"a": "no"}.
Python (PyYAML) doesn't support 1.2 yet: https://github.com/yaml/pyyaml/issues/116
Ruby (Psych) ditto -- I can't even find a tracking issue to enable it.
Go (go-yaml) is a mixture of YAML 1.1 and 1.2, depending on the author's preferences.
Also, as a rough guideline, you can't have a backwards-incompatible revision of a versioned spec declare that it's the new default version, because that breaks all existing users.
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I accidentally used YAML.parse instead of JSON.parse, and it worked?
Many parsers either default to YAML pre-1.2 or do not even expose a YAML 1.2 option. PyYAML has no 1.2 option, for example. So unless Ansible is using something other than PyYAML...
Relevant (open) PR: https://github.com/yaml/pyyaml/pull/555
- AttributeError: '_io.TextIOWrapper' object has no attribute 'items'
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Why doesn't yaml allow safe_dump for decimals?
Are you perhaps talking about decimal.Decimal? https://github.com/yaml/pyyaml/issues/255
cue
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Show HN: Workout Tracker – self-hosted, single binary web application
Where `kube.cue` sets reasonable defaults (e.g. image is /). The "cluster" runs on a mini PC in my basement, and I have a small Digital Ocean VM with a static IP acting as an ingress (networking via Tailscale). Backups to cloud storage with restic, alerting/monitoring with Prometheus/Grafana, Caddy/Tailscale for local ingress.
[1] https://www.talos.dev/
[2] https://cuelang.org/
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Apple releases Pkl – onfiguration as code language
I've been somewhat surprised that CUE bills itself as "tooling friendly" and doesn't yet have a language server- the number one bit of tooling most devs use for a particular language.
I'm assuming it's becaus CUE is still unstable?
Anyway, if others are interested in CUE's LSP work, I think https://github.com/cue-lang/cue/issues/142 is the issue to subscribe to
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Why the fuck are we templating YAML? (2019)
This is where I usually pitch in with "Have your heard of CUELang, our lord and savior?": https://cuelang.org/
- Not turing complete
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10 Ways for Kubernetes Declarative Configuration Management
CUE: The core problem CUE solves is "type checking", which is mainly used in configuration constraint verification scenarios and simple cloud native configuration scenarios.
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Lua is a viable alternative for JSON
If you really want executable configurations please consider a newer language like https://dascript.org or https://cuelang.org which provide better type safety.
1- https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38030778
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Writerside – a new technical writing environment from JetBrains
Markdown and XML are nice, but what about more advanced documentation formats like OpenAPI? For one recent project, I set up automatic generation of the OpenAPI docs from (much more compact and flexible) CUE definitions (https://cuelang.org/) - which has the bonus of also being able to test the API against the definitions. JetBrains has a CUE plugin, but it's really barebones (doesn't even support jumping from the usage of a schema to its definition). Of course the possibilities when generating docs are endless (just think of the various syntaxes for doc comments, embedding examples/tests in source code etc.)...
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Show HN: Config-file-validator – CLI tool to validate all your config files
It doesn't include validators for TOML and INI, but if you're doing JSON and YAML, I would take a look at using or building upon CUE (https://cuelang.org/). It is a different take on schema definition (plus more), and is surprising terse and powerful model.
- That's a Lot of YAML
- An INI Critique of TOML
- What Is Wrong with TOML?
What are some alternatives?
confuse - painless YAML config files for Python
dhall-lang - Maintainable configuration files
strictyaml - Type-safe YAML parser and validator.
jsonnet - Jsonnet - The data templating language
yamllint - A linter for YAML files.
terraform - Terraform enables you to safely and predictably create, change, and improve infrastructure. It is a source-available tool that codifies APIs into declarative configuration files that can be shared amongst team members, treated as code, edited, reviewed, and versioned.
starlark-rust - A Rust implementation of the Starlark language
marshmallow - A lightweight library for converting complex objects to and from simple Python datatypes.
Protobuf - Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
python-strict-yaml-parsing - Examples of strict yaml parsing in python
jsonnet-libs - Grafana Labs' Jsonnet libraries