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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 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]
JSON was based on a subset of the JavaScript scripting language (specifically, Standard ECMA-262 3rd Edition—December 1999 [11]) and is commonly used with JavaScript, but it is a language-independent data format.
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
XAML—eXtensible Application Markup Language; XDM—X Window Display Manager; XDMCP—X Display Manager Control Protocol; XCBL—XML Common Business Library; XHTML—eXtensible Hypertext Markup Language; XILP—X Interactive ListProc; XML—eXtensible Markup Language; XMMS—X Multimedia System; XMPP—eXtensible Messaging and Presence Protocol
RAML was first proposed in 2013. The initial RAML specification was authored by Uri Sarid, Emiliano Lesende, Santiago Vacas and Damian Martinez, and garnered support from technology leaders like MuleSoft, AngularJS, Intuit, Box, PayPal, Programmable Web and API Web Science, Kin Lane, SOA Software, and Cisco. [4]
A data interchange (or exchange) language/format is a language that is domain-independent and can be used for data from any kind of discipline. [4] They have "evolved from being markup and display-oriented to further support the encoding of metadata that describes the structural attributes of the information."