YAML was designed to include human readable forms of data such as yours, (but there are multiple ways of representing data in YAML that are not so readable)
XML, I've seen described as having the readability of binary combined with the inefficiency of ASCII.
JSON has a bit too many double quotes to make its actual data stand out. And if you want to edit the data by hand, you really have to take care with trailing comma's in arrays and objects.
There is of course no viewer or browser that directly supports your format, but if you start with JSON it is possible to write a JavaScript program that displays each dataset properly with hyperlinks. You can do the same when you start with XML via de DOMparser that is built into the browser. There are also YAML parsers in javascript that can do the same for YAML based data, but these would have to be installed and loaded into the browser.
If you don't want to program in javascript, I would go for putting the data in YAML and have a Python program that (recursively) looks at all the individual YAML files and generates HTML from these, including correct hyperlinks (to the HTML "version" of the dependencies) and either links to the images, or in place display of the images. Make the program smart enough to only (re-)generate the HTML if the corresponding file containng the YAML document has a newer timestamp.
This is similar to how some blog systems work that generate static views from markup. And since you want to process the data using Python anyway, you should be able to re-use some of the code you write.
You should make your /publish/path/metadata/poster.yaml
:
created_by: John
creation_date: 2018-11-12
version: 005
creator_comments: Updated to latest published images for Poppy
path_to_file: /publish/path/images/poster.png
dependencies:
- /publish/path/metadata/poppy.yaml
- /publish/path/metadata/dwarf.yaml
- /publish/path/metadata/giant.yaml
As you can see you don't have to write dates as strings, YAML directly supports the YYYY-MM-DD format (where it is unclear if your creation_date is the MMDDYYYY as used in the USA or the DDMMYYYY as is more wideley used in other English speaking countries). How you display dates in your HTML is of course your preference.
With your YAML you should adhere to the latest spec (1.2 from 2009) and use ruamel.yaml
(disclaimer: I am the author of that package). If you go for YAML 1.1 (in which case you can use PyYAML), you'll have to quote and define your versions as scalar strings as PyYAML otherwise interprets version: 015
as the number 13. ruamel.yaml
also correctly round-trips and writes such integers again with leading zeros. If your version would contain non-numerical data, then YAML automatically loads this as a string (no need to quote).
For dumping the HTML there are many options, using some library where you create a tree structure and then dumping that has the advantage that you cannot generate invalid HTML. But even if you generate HTML "by hand", you should have your output relatively quickly debugged.
The conversion program can of course also check that all references exist and warn you if they don't.
A simple program that does the above (with not so good looking HTML as output):
from datetime import date
from pathlib import Path
from ruamel.yaml import YAML
from ruamel.yaml.scalarint import ScalarInt
yaml = YAML()
def convert_data(d, fp, level=0):
"""recursively write a loaded YAML document as HTML"""
if isinstance(d, dict):
print('<table>', file=fp)
for k in d:
print('<tr><td>', file=fp)
convert_data(k, fp, level=level+1)
print('</td><td>', file=fp)
v = d[k]
convert_data(v, fp, level=level+1)
print('</td></tr>', file=fp)
print('</table>', file=fp)
return
if isinstance(d, list):
print('<ul>', file=fp)
for elem in d:
print('<li>', file=fp)
convert_data(elem, fp, level=level+1)
print('</li>', file=fp)
print('</ul>', file=fp)
return
if isinstance(d, str) and d and d[0] == '/':
if d.endswith('.yaml'):
h = Path(d).with_suffix('.html')
print('<a href="{}">{}</a>'.format(h, d), file=fp)
return
if d.endswith('.png'):
print('<img src="{}">'.format(d), file=fp)
return
if isinstance(d, ScalarInt):
if d._width is not None:
# integer with leading zeros
print('{:0{}d}'.format(d, d._width), file=fp)
return
if isinstance(d, date):
# print the date in DDMMYYYY format
print('{:%d%m%Y}'.format(d), file=fp)
return
print(d, file=fp)
def convert_file(yaml_file, html_file):
data = yaml.load(yaml_file)
with html_file.open('w') as fp:
print('<html>\n<body>', file=fp)
convert_data(data, fp)
print('</body>\n</html>', file=fp)
def main():
for yaml_file in Path('.').glob('*.yaml'):
html_file = yaml_file.with_suffix('.html')
if True or not html_file.exists() or \
html_file.stat().st_mtime < yaml_file.stat().st_mtime:
convert_file(yaml_file, html_file)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
You could of course make the links and images explicit by using tags ( !link /publish/path/metadata/poppy.yaml
and !img /publish/path/images/poster.png
and have classes with a constructor for these tags that then dump appropriate HTML. This does however not necessarily give you better readable YAML.
dependencies
would end up as a list of dictionaries?!include
tag. In PyYAML you can define what to do when loading a node with such a tag.