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YAML (/ ˈ j æ m əl /, rhymes with camel [4]) was first proposed by Clark Evans in 2001, [15] who designed it together with Ingy döt Net [16] and Oren Ben-Kiki. [16]Originally YAML was said to mean Yet Another Markup Language, [17] because it was released in an era that saw a proliferation of markup languages for presentation and connectivity (HTML, XML, SGML, etc.).
YAML: Clark Evans, Ingy döt Net, and Oren Ben-Kiki C, Java, Perl, Python, Ruby, Email, HTML, MIME, URI, XML, SAX, SOAP, JSON [7] No Version 1.2: No Yes Yes Partial (Kwalify Archived 2021-08-12 at the Wayback Machine, Rx, built-in language type-defs) No No Name Creator-maintainer Based on Standardized? Specification Binary? Human-readable ...
YAML – Yet Another Markup Language. Later redefined to YAML Ain't Markup Language, making it a recursive acronym; Yandex – Yet another indexer, [6] a web search engine and index; YA-NewsWatcher – a Usenet client for classic Mac OS; YANG – Yet Another Next Generation; YAP – Yet Another Previewer, document previewer
YAML—YAML Ain't Markup Language; YARN—Yet Another Resource Negotiator; YaST—Yet another Setup Tool; Z. ZCAV—Zone Constant Angular Velocity;
List of document markup languages—This term is often used synonymously with "markup language", presumably because document can refer to any written or recorded representation. List of XML markup languages-- XML itself is properly a meta-language used to define other markup languages. List of general purpose markup languages
A recursive acronym is an acronym that refers to itself, and appears most frequently in computer programming.The term was first used in print in 1979 in Douglas Hofstadter's book Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, in which Hofstadter invents the acronym GOD, meaning "GOD Over Djinn", to help explain infinite series, and describes it as a recursive acronym. [1]
YAML (Yet Another Multicolumn Layout) is a cross-browser CSS framework. [2] [3] It allows web designers to create a low-barrier website with comparatively little effort. Integrations of the YAML layouts have been created for various content management systems. These include WordPress, LifeType, TYPO3, Joomla, xt: Commerce and Drupal. [4]
Both are factually wrong. First the YAML spec clearly defines both order preserving and non-order preserving hash types. It's not an after thought, it's part of the main language. Second there is no implied native language data structure for YAML. third, YAML's array structure can be substituted as well to explicitly maintain order.