Yes, they could've just used JSON. Totally pointless waste of time.
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It's docs are garbage, but the language is quite simple and human readable even for non-techies. I think it's a bit too easy at times, resulting in people just kinda winging it
Somehow it’s clunky to use.
huh?
I find developing GitHub CI in YAML clunky.
I don't find configuring a simple service via YAML config, with a preset showing me and explaining what I can do clunky.
cradles yaml in her hands and coos don't you talk to my baby like that! she has potential !
If YAML and JSON were gripping my hands for dear life, dangling off of a cliff...
I would let both drop into the abyss so I could spend more time with INI.
Yaml is fundamentally the same as the json and xml it has mostly replaced (and the toml that didn't manage to replace yaml)... it's a data serialization format and just doesn't have any facility for making abstractions, which are the main tool we human use to deal with complexity.
Abstractions aren't concrete and all of these standards you're referring to are concrete data serialisations. You may be interested in CUE which captures this concept in its design.