Program in YAML — Code is Data
YAMLScript is a functional programming language with a stylized YAML syntax.
YAMLScript can be used for:
- Writing new programs and applications
- Run with
ys file.ys
- Or compile to binary with
ys -C file.ys
- Run with
- Writing reusable shared libraries
- Bindable to almost any programming language
- Using as a YAML loader module in many programming languages
- Plain / existing YAML files
- YAML files with new functional magics
YAMLScript programs can either be "run" or "loaded". When a YAMLScript program is run, it is executed as a normal program. When a YAMLScript program is loaded, it evaluates to a JSON-model data structure.
Most existing YAML files in the wild are already valid YAMLScript programs.
If you have a valid YAML (1.2 Core Schema) file that doesn't use custom
tags, and loads to a value expressible in JSON, then it is a valid YAMLScript
program.
YAMLScript's load
operation will evaluate that file exactly the same in any
programming language / environment.
These existing YAML files obviously can't use YAMLScript's functional programming features since that would be ambiguous. For example, what is the JSON value when "loading" this YAMLScript program?
foo: inc(41)
Is it {"foo": "inc(41)"}
or {"foo": 42}
?
YAMLScript programs must start with a special YAML tag !yamlscript/v0
to
indicate that they have functional capabilities.
!yamlscript/v0/data
foo:: inc(41)
Note: The
/v0
in the tag indicates the YAMLScript API version. This is so that future versions of YAMLScript can run programs written to an older API version, and also so that older versions of YAMLScript don't try to run programs written to a newer API version.
There are two primary ways to use YAMLScript:
- Using the
ys
command line runner / loader / compiler / installer - Using a YAMLScript library in your own programming language
The ys
command line tool is the easiest way to get started with YAMLScript.
It has these main modes of operation:
ys <file>
- Run a YAMLScript programys --run <file>
- Same as above but explicitys --load <file>
- Load a YAMLScript programys --compile <file>
- Compile a YAMLScript program to Clojureys --binary <file>
- Compile YAMLScript to a native binary executableys --eval '<expr>'
- Evaluate a YAMLScript expression stringys --repl
- Start an interactive YAMLScript REPL sessionys --install
- Install the latest libyamlscript shared libraryys --upgrade
- Upgrade ys and libyamlscriptys --help
- Show theys
command help
You can also use YAMLScript as a library in your own programming language.
For example, in Python you can use the yamlscript
module like this:
import yamlscript
ys = yamlscript.YAMLScript()
text = open("foo.yaml").read()
data = ys.load(text)
YAMLScript is supported on these operating systems:
- Linux
- macOS
- Windows (work in progress)
YAMLScript is supported on these architectures:
- Intel/AMD (
x86_64
) - ARM (
aarch64
)
For now other systems cannot be supported because ys
and libyamlscript
are
compiled by GraalVM's native-image
tool, which only supports the above
systems.
YAMLScript wants to be the best YAML loader for both static and dynamic YAML usage in every programming language where YAML is used.
It will have the same API, same features, same bugs and same bug fixes in every language, giving you a great and consistent YAML experience everywhere.
At this early stage, YAMLScript has bindings for these programming languages:
Even though YAMLScript often has the look of an imperative programming language, it actually is just a (YAML based) syntax that compiles to Clojure code. The resulting Clojure code is then run by a native-machine-code Clojure runtime called Small Clojure Interpreter (SCI).
Clojure is a functional programming language with its own Lisp syntax. Therefore it is fair to say that YAMLScript is a (functional) Lisp, even though it commonly doesn't look like one syntactically.
Typically Clojure produces Java bytecode that is run on the JVM, but for YAMLScript there is no Java or JVM involved. In testing so far, YAMLScript programs tend to run as fast or faster than equivalent Perl or Python programs.
For getting started with YAMLScript, you don't need to know anything about Lisp or Clojure. You can use it with as much or as little Lisp-ness as you want; the syntax is quite flexible (and even programmable!). As your YAMLScript programming requirements grow, you can rest assured that you have the full power of Clojure at your disposal.
You can try out the latest version of the ys
command without actually
"installing" it.
If you run this command in Bash or Zsh:
. <(curl https://yamlscript.org/try-ys)
it will install the ys
command in a temporary directory (under /tmp/
) and
then add the directory to your current PATH
shell variable.
This will allow you to try the ys
command in your current shell only.
No other present or future shell session will be affected.
Try it out!
At the moment, the best way to install YAMLScript is to build it from source, but see the section "Installing YAMLScript Binary Releases" below.
This is very easy to do because the YAMLScript build process has very few dependencies:
bash
(your interactive shell can be any shell)curl
git
make
zlib-dev
(need this installed on Linux)
To install the ys
command line tool, and libyamlscript
shared library,
run these commands:
git clone https://github.com/yaml/yamlscript
cd yamlscript
make build
make install
The make install
command will install ys
and libyamlscript
to
~/.local/bin
and ~/.local/lib
respectively, by default.
If run as root they will default to /usr/local/bin
and /usr/local/lib
.
To install to a different location, run make install PREFIX=/some/path
.
Notes:
make install
triggers amake build
if needed, but...- You need to run
make build
not as root- The build can take several minutes (
native-image
is slow)- If you install to a custom location, you will need to add that location to your
PATH
andLD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variables
YAMLScript now ships binary releases for some platforms here.
To install a latest release for your machine platform, try:
$ curl https://yamlscript.org/install | bash
Make sure ~/.local/bin
is in your PATH
environment variable.
You can use the following environment variables to control the installation:
PREFIX=...
- The directory to install to. Default:~/.local
VERSION=...
- The YAMLScript version to install. Default:0.1.75
BIN=1
- Only install thePREFIX/bin/ys
command line tool.LIB=1
- Only install thePREFIX/lib/libyamlscript
shared library.DEBUG=1
- Print the Bash commands that are being run.
Once you have installed the ys
command you can upgrade to a bin binary
version with ys --upgrade
.
YAMLScript ships its language binding libraries and the libyamlscript.so
shared library separately.
Currently, each binding release version requires an exact version of the shared library, or it will not work. That's because the YAMLScript language is still evolving quickly.
The best way to install a binding library is to use your programming language's package manager to install the latest binding version, and the YAMLScript installer to install the latest shared library version.
So for Python you would:
$ pip install yamlscript
$ ys --install
The Perl installation process can automatically install the shared library, so you can just do:
cpanm YAMLScript
Eventually, the YAMLScript binding installation process will become simpler and more consistent across all languages.
The YAMLScript source code repository is a mono-repo containing:
- The YAMLScript compiler code
- The YAMLScript shared library code
- A YAMLScript binding module for each programming language
- The YAMLScript test suite
- The YAMLScript documentation
- The yamlscript.org website (with docs, blog, wiki, etc)
The YAMLScript repository uses a Makefile
system to build, test and install
its various offerings.
There is a top level Makefile
and each repo subdirectory has its own
Makefile
.
When run at the top level, many make
targets like test
, build
, install
,
clean
, distclean
, etc will invoke that target in each relevant subdirectory.
Given that this repository has so few dependencies, you should be able to clone
it and run make
targets (try make test
) without any problems.
To ensure that YAMLScript libraries work the same across all languages, this project aims to have a binding implementation for each programming language.
If you would like to contribute a new YAMLScript binding for a programming language, you are encouraged to submit a pull request to this repository.
See the YAMLScript Contributing Guide for more details.
Note: The documentation linked to below is out of date, but should give you a decent idea of what YAMLScript is about. It will be rewritten soon.
- The YAMLScript Blog
- Example YAMLScript Programs on RosettaCode.org
- An early YAMLScript Presentation Video
- Old Perl YAMLScript Implementation Documentation (Out of date but informative)
- Ingy döt Net - Creator / Lead
- Ven de Thiel - Language design
- tony-o - Raku binding
- Ethiraric - Rust binding
- José Joaquín Atria - Perl binding
- Delon R.Newman - Clojure, Java, Ruby bindings
- Andrew Pam - Go binding
- Kenta Murata - Julia binding
Copyright 2022-2024 by Ingy döt Net
This is free software, licensed under:
The MIT (X11) License