I used yaml for some things back in the stone age (shout out to why the lucky stiff and syck). The more I used it, and the more I came in contact with it I started to dislike that it has so many features, and tries to be overly clever. I'm kind of surprised to see that it's making a comeback (or maybe it never went away).
YAML is so ubiquitous I have to wonder what corner of tech you work in that you aren't encountering it in the wild. Kubernetes really brought it to center stage going on 10 years ago, but it's the config file format for many many applications these days.
That's not meant as an endorsement, just saying it's not "making a comeback" any more than Taylor Swift is in music. It's The Thing right now and has been for a while.
> This tool is not yet officially supported by Google. It is currently maintained solely by @braydonk, and unless something changes primarily in spare time.
It's ungodly slow on large projects. I've been using `deno fmt` lately (despite not having any other use for deno), it reformat/checks thousands of files per second, and supports YAML too.
This says YAML support is behind an unstable flag, but I haven't been passing any flags. Works fine anyway.
https://noyaml.com/
That's not meant as an endorsement, just saying it's not "making a comeback" any more than Taylor Swift is in music. It's The Thing right now and has been for a while.
Granted, Python and other popular languages are also on an ancient YAML version for some inexplicable reason...
No thanks. I'm done after Kaniko. https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/kaniko
This says YAML support is behind an unstable flag, but I haven't been passing any flags. Works fine anyway.
https://docs.deno.com/runtime/reference/cli/fmt/