Mojca Miklavec wrote:
>> Question : What does ".yaml" mean ? > > "YAML Ain't Markup Language" / "Yet Another Markup Language" > > See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAML#Examples > > It's human-readable and computer-parsable format that would replace > free-form text in the "headers" of hyphenation patterns (keeping all > the content, but unifying the way the data is represented). > > As an example: > > > http://tug.org/svn/texhyphen/trunk/hyph-utf8/tex/generic/hyph-utf8/patterns/tex/hyph-sl.tex?revision=729&view=markup > > The contents would end up in a separate valid YAML file after > removing the comment sign (and the patterns). Hmmm. Is there /really/ any reason for adopting yet another /ad hoc/ solution ? Could this information not better (and more portably) be expressed using industry-standard markup such as XML ? ** Phil.