Danny van Dyk wrote:
IMHO a text based file has a big advantage in this proposed application
over fileformats which use XML: Any administrator can read it with his
editor of choice, right from the console.
This is an important aspect for sure, but why can't such file be 
generated from a marked up one?  Because the same message will be put in 
multiple forms (ideally) it is best to have a version with all the 
required meta-data to generate all the other formats, because if you 
have to add such meta-data it's usually much worse (= manual or 
conditional human work).
Some people like reading console messages, others plain text mail 
messages, others want html marked up mail messages, other others like 
reading an rss-feed, and of course there are people that like to read 
the full fledged funky marked up with all hyperlinks possible html 
version on the web.
I think the only real importance is that all representations can easily 
be generated from the original source, be that XML, reStructuredText or 
any other format.
With regard to being it hard to write or not, I think these kind of 
messages are very well suited for templates, so it is just a matter of 
filling in the message, which should make the underlying format not so 
important.
Just my €0.02 on the XML vs. plain text discussion.


--
Fabian Groffen
--
gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list

Reply via email to