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Data | il y a 6 ans | |
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.gitignore | il y a 7 ans | |
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README.md | il y a 6 ans | |
Setup.hs | il y a 8 ans | |
adnot.cabal | il y a 7 ans |
WARNING: this repo contains unrepentant bikeshedding and wheel-reinvention. You almost definitely shouldn't use it, and it's probably best to disregard the entire thing!
The Adnot format is a simple data and configuration format intended to have a slightly enriched data model when compared to JSON or s-expressions but still retain the comparative simplicity of those formats. Unlike JSON, Adnot chooses to avoid redundant structural information like punctuation; unlike s-expressions, Adnot values natively express a wider range of basic data types.
Adnot is not intended to be a data interchange format, but rather to be a richer and more convenient syntax for certain kinds of data description that might otherwise be done in more unwieldy, complicated formats like YAML. As a first approximation, Adnot may be treated as a more human- and version-control-friendly version of JSON whose data model is intended to resemble the data model of statically typed functional programming languages.
A given Adnot value is either one of three basic types—an integer, a double, a string—or one of three composite types: a sequence of values, a mapping of symbols to values, or a tagged sequence of values which begins with a symbol:
expr ::= "{" (string expr) * "}"
| "(" string expr* ")"
| "[" expr* "]"
| string
| integer
| double
Strings can be expressed in two different ways: one is quoted strings, which are formatted like JSON strings with the same encoding and the same set of escape sequences; the other is as bare words, in which strings that begin with a character of unicode class XID_Start
and consist subsequently of zero or more XID_Continue
characters can be written without quotation marks.
The three kinds of composite types are meant to resemble records, sum or variant types, and lists, respectively. Zero or more symbol-expression pairs inside curly brackets form a mapping:
# a basic mapping
{
x 2
y 3
"and z" 4
}
Pairs do not include colons and are not separated by commas. A mapping must contain an even number of sub-expressions, and every odd subexpression must be a string. Whitespace is ignored except as a separator between tokens, so the above map is identical to
{x 2 y 3 "and z" 4}
A list is represented by square brackets with zero or more possibly-heterogeneous expressions:
# a basic list
[ 2 "foo" bar ]
A tagged expression is represented by parentheses with a single string followed by zero or more possibly-heterogeneous expressions:
# a basic tagged expression
(some_tag blah 7.8 "??")
These are how tagged data-types are represented: because the thing inside the parens must be a string, it can correspond to a data type in an ML-like language.
Adnot values can contain comments, which are line-oriented and begin with a #
character.