updated yaml syntax and gotchas

specifically added example for getting strings that match boolean values
pull/13189/head
Brian Coca 9 years ago
parent 355fa4797a
commit 1f34c6b214

@ -20,52 +20,52 @@ Each item in the list is a list of key/value pairs, commonly
called a "hash" or a "dictionary". So, we need to know how
to write lists and dictionaries in YAML.
There's another small quirk to YAML. All YAML files (regardless of their association with
Ansible or not) should begin with ``---``. This is part of the YAML
format and indicates the start of a document.
There's another small quirk to YAML. All YAML files (regardless of their association with Ansible or not) can optionally
begin with ``---`` and end with ``...``. This is part of the YAML format and indicates the start and end of a document.
All members of a list are lines beginning at the same indentation level starting
with a ``"- "`` (a dash and a space)::
All members of a list are lines beginning at the same indentation level starting with a ``"- "`` (a dash and a space)::
---
# A list of tasty fruits
- Apple
- Orange
- Strawberry
- Mango
fruits:
- Apple
- Orange
- Strawberry
- Mango
...
A dictionary is represented in a simple ``key: value`` form (the colon must be followed by a space)::
---
# An employee record
name: Example Developer
job: Developer
skill: Elite
- martin:
name: Martin D'vloper
job: Developer
skill: Elite
Dictionaries can also be represented in an abbreviated form if you really want to::
Dictionaries and lists can also be represented in an abbreviated form if you really want to::
---
# An employee record
{name: Example Developer, job: Developer, skill: Elite}
employees:
- martin: {name: Martin D'vloper, job: Developer, skill: Elite}
fruits: ['Apple', 'Orange', 'Strawberry', 'Mango]
.. _truthiness:
Ansible doesn't really use these too much, but you can also specify a
boolean value (true/false) in several forms::
Ansible doesn't really use these too much, but you can also specify a boolean value (true/false) in several forms::
---
create_key: yes
needs_agent: no
knows_oop: True
likes_emacs: TRUE
uses_cvs: false
Let's combine what we learned so far in an arbitrary YAML example. This really
has nothing to do with Ansible, but will give you a feel for the format::
Let's combine what we learned so far in an arbitrary YAML example.
This really has nothing to do with Ansible, but will give you a feel for the format::
---
# An employee record
name: Example Developer
name: Martin D'vloper
job: Developer
skill: Elite
employed: True
@ -79,8 +79,7 @@ has nothing to do with Ansible, but will give you a feel for the format::
python: Elite
dotnet: Lame
That's all you really need to know about YAML to start writing
`Ansible` playbooks.
That's all you really need to know about YAML to start writing `Ansible` playbooks.
Gotchas
-------
@ -100,6 +99,14 @@ with a "{", YAML will think it is a dictionary, so you must quote it, like so::
foo: "{{ variable }}"
The same applies for strings that start or contain any YAML special characters `` [] {} : > | `` .
Boolean conversion is helpful, but this can be a problem when you want a literal `yes` or other boolean values as a string.
In these cases just use quotes::
non_boolean: "yes"
other_string: "False"
.. seealso::

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