I've become a fan of TOML over the past few months. I used it for the settings of my scripts. I think it's the best for readability amongst the other file types, JSON and YAML. Maybe I'm just old and use to the ini days with Windows. Your video helped me understand YAML, though.
Very cool, didn't know about TOML until you mentioned it. It looks really good if you were to homebake an application that needs a quick and easy to read configuration file. I will keep it in mind for future projects!
I'm getting an error in the python script "Import "yaml" could not be resolved from source Pylance report (MissingModuleSource)" and Import "rich.console" could not be resolved Pylance (reportMissingImports) I believe it's stopping me from running the script as It is saying there is no such file in the directory. Any idea what's giving the errors? Could it be my plugins?
Thanks for explanation video. I think it would good if you clarified is it a line break that is signalling end of value? Also, are the indentations required or just being used to improve readibility? If they are required are they spaces or tabs?
Thank you for the question. It can be both. YAML is used in a lot of different tools and products. I use it mostly in Docker and Kubernetes and for some config files when I develop my own apps.
Really nice and simple explanation. Can you please make some video on what kid of rights user need to run Dev Ops powershell script on remote server , to create the environment?
May you explain this part which you ran in Terminal: "Python . ead_yaml.py myfile.yml"? I do not get how this part works ----> . ead_yaml.py myfile.yml. Does it run two files simulatneously? Thanks if you can elaborate on this!
read_yaml.py is the python script, "myfile.yml" is the argument. The python script takes in the argument, in this case the filename, so it know what filename to read. I hope that explanation helps.
Can you please make vedio for how to validate yaml files and what are the different tools we can use to validate yml files.Recently i got a requirement in my project like we need to validate yml files and that logic should merge with buildpipeline and if we have any invalid syntax my build pipeline should fail before we merge code to master branch. I searched many examples in net but most of them i found in python scripts since i am not familiar with python script i am looking examples in Java.
Thank you, but I think it was not enough. it would be more better if you could explain which lines are dedicated for dictionaries or for example why they have used lists for ports and ...
Thanks for the video, this is really helpful. I am just starting to learn yaml. In the docker-compose.yml file line number 5 and 6 why should ports value should be represented in such a manner where the same port number is repeated with a colon in between and surrounded by quotes - '8086:8086'
this is a docker-compose file, which is for container configuration. The 8086:8086 maps port 8086 to port 8086 on the container. This could be beneficial if you have multiple containers listening on the same port, you could map them like 8081:8086, 8082:8086 etc.
I still don’t understand what pb yml solved when we could still use json to resolve the issue Basically, Please could you make a video about why yml is important over other file type like json for instance Thanks
Most people find YML simpler to read, so a lot of tools adopted it. A lot of these tools accept both, but YML is becoming the more dominant default format. Realistically you should be comfortable with both.
It's becoming the standardized format for configuration files. In the past configuration files didn't really have a standard.. and different applications had different nuances with how the configuration should be set. YAML fixes that with it's standardized format. It's also very human readable. Hope that helps!
YAML is one of those files your going to be running into a lot in your IT Career! Smash that like button if this video helped you.
Great tutorial. At about 3:58 in the video, there is a loud pop or crack which scared the heck out of me.
Your explanation is the best from all YT man. Congrats!
Man, I've loved your tranquility. You've got a new follower. Thanks!
I've become a fan of TOML over the past few months. I used it for the settings of my scripts. I think it's the best for readability amongst the other file types, JSON and YAML. Maybe I'm just old and use to the ini days with Windows. Your video helped me understand YAML, though.
Very cool, didn't know about TOML until you mentioned it. It looks really good if you were to homebake an application that needs a quick and easy to read configuration file. I will keep it in mind for future projects!
I'm getting an error in the python script "Import "yaml" could not be resolved from source Pylance report (MissingModuleSource)"
and
Import "rich.console" could not be resolved Pylance (reportMissingImports)
I believe it's stopping me from running the script as It is saying there is no such file in the directory.
Any idea what's giving the errors? Could it be my plugins?
Thanks for explanation video. I think it would good if you clarified is it a line break that is signalling end of value? Also, are the indentations required or just being used to improve readibility? If they are required are they spaces or tabs?
Thanks mike
We use YAML for Config files or for Data preprocessing and Machine Learning also?
Thank you for the question. It can be both. YAML is used in a lot of different tools and products. I use it mostly in Docker and Kubernetes and for some config files when I develop my own apps.
Can you make a video about your suggestion channels, please? Like your channel, it is amazing but you deserve more subs.
(yaml: line 71: found unexpected end of stream) can u solve this issue????
Really nice and simple explanation. Can you please make some video on what kid of rights user need to run Dev Ops powershell script on remote server , to create the environment?
hi, can you help me to find the difference between two YAML files and display the difference in HTML format ?
Concise and really clear.
Great explanation love it.
May you explain this part which you ran in Terminal: "Python .
ead_yaml.py myfile.yml"? I do not get how this part works ----> .
ead_yaml.py myfile.yml. Does it run two files simulatneously? Thanks if you can elaborate on this!
read_yaml.py is the python script, "myfile.yml" is the argument. The python script takes in the argument, in this case the filename, so it know what filename to read.
I hope that explanation helps.
Can you please make vedio for how to validate yaml files and what are the different tools we can use to validate yml files.Recently i got a requirement in my project like we need to validate yml files and that logic should merge with buildpipeline and if we have any invalid syntax my build pipeline should fail before we merge code to master branch. I searched many examples in net but most of them i found in python scripts since i am not familiar with python script i am looking examples in Java.
Could you please share one example codefresh yaml file to upload multiple files to artifactory
Thank you, but I think it was not enough. it would be more better if you could explain which lines are dedicated for dictionaries or for example why they have used lists for ports and ...
Thanks for the video, this is really helpful. I am just starting to learn yaml. In the docker-compose.yml file line number 5 and 6 why should ports value should be represented in such a manner where the same port number is repeated with a colon in between and surrounded by quotes - '8086:8086'
this is a docker-compose file, which is for container configuration. The 8086:8086 maps port 8086 to port 8086 on the container. This could be beneficial if you have multiple containers listening on the same port, you could map them like 8081:8086, 8082:8086 etc.
@@DevOpsJourney thanks for clarifying. Cheers.
nice explanation.
wonderful oneeee
Very nice video !!!
Thank you! Cheers!
Great video!
I still don’t understand what pb yml solved when we could still use json to resolve the issue
Basically,
Please could you make a video about why yml is important over other file type like json for instance
Thanks
Most people find YML simpler to read, so a lot of tools adopted it. A lot of these tools accept both, but YML is becoming the more dominant default format. Realistically you should be comfortable with both.
@@DevOpsJourney got you
Thanks
thank YoU buddy
thankYou
Ok, so what problem does YAML solve? Why does YAML exist?
It's becoming the standardized format for configuration files. In the past configuration files didn't really have a standard.. and different applications had different nuances with how the configuration should be set. YAML fixes that with it's standardized format. It's also very human readable.
Hope that helps!
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3:57 f my ear dude
I'm so sorry :( :(
This video was created when I had a ghetto mic and I didn't catch it in the editing process.
@@DevOpsJourney sorry to exaggerate it, not a big problem, was just letting you know,