========================= Pesto specification draft ========================= Pesto is a text-based human-editable and machine-transformable cooking recipe interchange format. .. class:: nodoc > module Codec.Pesto where About this document ------------------- This section contains various information about this document. The `second section `_ motivates why inventing another file format is necessary, followed by the goals_ of Pesto. After a short Pesto `primer `_ intended for the casual user the language’s `syntax `_ and `semantics `_ are presented. The `linting section `_ limits the language to useful cooking recipes. Examples for user presentation of recipes and serialization follow. Being a literate program this document is specification and reference implementation at the same time. The code is written in Haskell_ and uses the parsec_ parser combinator library, as well as HUnit_ for unit tests. Even without knowing Haskell’s syntax you should be able to understand this specification. There’s a description above every code snippet explaining what is going on. .. _Haskell: http://learnyouahaskell.com/ .. _HUnit: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/HUnit .. _parsec: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/parsec The key words “MUST”, “MUST NOT”, “REQUIRED”, “SHALL”, “SHALL NOT”, “SHOULD”, “SHOULD NOT”, “RECOMMENDED”, “MAY”, and “OPTIONAL” in this document are to be interpreted as described in `RFC 2119`_. .. _RFC 2119: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119 :Version: 1-draft :License: CC0_ :Website: https://6xq.net/pesto/ :Discussion: https://github.com/PromyLOPh/pesto :Contributors: - `Lars-Dominik Braun `_ .. _CC0: https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ .. _motivation: Motivation ---------- The landscape of recipe interchange formats is quite fragmented. First of all there’s HTML microdata. `Google rich snippets`_, which are equivalent to the schema.org_ microdata vocabulary, are widely used by commercial recipe sites. Although the main objective of microdata is to make content machine-readable most sites will probably use it, because it is considered a search-engine optimization (SEO). Additionally parsing HTML pulled from the web is a nightmare and thus not a real option for sharing recipes. h-recipe_ provides a second vocabulary that has not been adopted widely yet. .. _Google rich snippets: https://developers.google.com/structured-data/rich-snippets/recipes .. _schema.org: http://schema.org/Recipe .. _h-recipe: http://microformats.org/wiki/h-recipe Most cooking-related software comes with their own recipe file format. Meal-Master_ is one example and, due to its age, a large amount of recipe files is `available in this format `_. There does not seem to be any official documentation for the format, but inofficial `ABNF grammar`_ and `format description `_ exist. A Meal-Master recipe template might look like this: .. code:: mealmaster ---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) Title: Categories: <Categories> Yield: <N servings> <N> <unit> <ingredient> … -------------------------------<Section name>----------------------------- <More ingredients> <Instructions> ----- Rezkonv_ aims to improve the Mealmaster format by lifting some of its character limits, adding new syntax and translating it to german. However the specification is available on request only. Early versions of MasterCook_ used the MXP_ file format, but newer software versions use, beside a bunch of other file formats, the XML-based MX2. .. _xml-formats: In general XML seems to be the preferred markup language for a bunch of interchange formats created around 2005. RecipeML_ Formerly known as DESSERT and released in 2002 (version 0.5). The license requires attribution and – at the same time – forbids using the name RecipeML for promotion without written permission. eatdrinkfeelgood_ Version 1.1 was released in 2002 as well, but the site is not online anymore. The DTD is licensed under the `CC by-sa`_ license. REML_ Released in 2005 (version 0.5), aims to improve support for commercial uses (restaurant menus and cookbooks). The XSD’s license permits free use and redistribution, but the reference implementation has no licensing information. `RecipeBook XML`_ Released 2005 as well and shared unter the terms of `CC by-sa`_ is not available on the web any more. CookML_ Last updated in 2006 (version 1.0.4) for the german-language shareware program Kalorio has a custom and restrictive licence that requires attribution and forbids derivate works. And then there’s XML-based export formats for most currently maintained recipe managing software. `Living Cookbook`_ Uses a XML-based format called fdx version 1.1. There’s no specification to be found, but a few examples__ are available and those are dated 2006. __ http://livingcookbook.com/Resource/DownloadableRecipes `My CookBook`_ Uses the file extension .mcb. A specification `is available <http://mycookbook-android.com/site/my-cookbook-xml-schema/>`_. KRecipes_ Uses its own export format. However there is no documentation whatsoever. Gourmet_ The program’s export format suffers from the same problem. The only document available is the `DTD <https://github.com/thinkle/gourmet/blob/7715c6ef87ee8c106f0a021972cd70d61d83cadb/data/recipe.dtd>`_. .. _CC by-sa: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/ YumML_ is an approach similar to those listed above, but based on YAML instead of XML. The specification has been removed from the web and is available through the Web Archive only. `Cordon Bleu`_ (1999) encodes recipes as programs for a cooking machine and defines a Pascal-like language. Being so close to real programming languages Cordon Bleu is barely useable by anyone except programmers. Additionally the language is poorly-designed, since its syntax is inconsistent and the user is limited to a set of predefined functions. Finally there is RxOL_, created in 1985. It constructs a graph from recipes written down with a few operators and postfix notation. It does not separate ingredients and cooking instructions like every other syntax introduced before. Although Pesto is not a direct descendant of RxOL both share many ideas. microformats.org_ has a similar list of recipe interchange formats. .. _REML: http://reml.sourceforge.net/ .. _eatdrinkfeelgood: https://web.archive.org/web/20070109085643/http://eatdrinkfeelgood.org/1.1/ .. _RecipeML: http://www.formatdata.com/recipeml/index.html .. _CookML: http://www.kalorio.de/index.php?Mod=Ac&Cap=CE&SCa=../cml/CookML_EN .. _Meal-Master: http://episoft.home.comcast.net/~episoft/ .. _ABNF grammar: http://www.wedesoft.de/anymeal-api/mealmaster.html .. _MasterCook: http://mastercook.com/ .. _MXP: http://www.oocities.org/heartland/woods/2073/Appendix.htm .. _RecipeBook XML: http://web.archive.org/web/20141101132332/http://www.happy-monkey.net/recipebook/ .. _YumML: http://web.archive.org/web/20140703234140/http://vikingco.de/yumml.html .. _Rezkonv: http://www.rezkonv.de/software/rksuite/rkformat.html .. _RxOL: http://www.dodomagnifico.com/641/Recipes/CompCook.html .. _Gourmet: http://thinkle.github.io/gourmet/ .. _KRecipes: http://krecipes.sourceforge.net/ .. _Cordon Bleu: http://www.inf.unideb.hu/~bognar/ps_ek/cb_lang.ps .. _microformats.org: http://microformats.org/wiki/recipe-formats .. _Living Cookbook: http://livingcookbook.com/ .. _My CookBook: http://mycookbook-android.com/ .. There is a copy at http://diyhpl.us/~bryan/papers2/CompCook.html as well .. More interesting stuff: .. - http://blog.moertel.com/posts/2010-01-08-a-formal-language-for-recipes-brain-dump.html .. - http://www.dangermouse.net/esoteric/chef.html Goals ----- First of all recipes are written *by* humans *for* humans. Thus a human-readable recipe interchange format is not enough. The recipes need to be human-editable without guidance like a GUI or assistant. That’s why, for instance, XML is not suitable and the interchange formats listed `above <xml-formats_>`_ have largely failed to gain traction. XML, even though simple itself, is still too complicated for the ordinary user. Instead a format needs to be as simple as possible, with as little markup as possible. A human editor must be able to remember the entire syntax. This works best if the file contents “make sense”. A good example for this is Markdown_. .. _Markdown: https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax We also have to acknowledge that machines play an important role in our daily life. They can help us, the users, accomplish our goals if they are able to understand the recipes as well. Thus they too need to be able to read and write recipes. Again, designing a machine-readable format is not enough. Recipes must be machine-transformable. A computer program should be able to create a new recipe from two existing ones, look up the ingredients and tell us how many joules one piece of that cake will have. And so on. That being said, Pesto does not aim to carry additional information about ingredients or recipes itself. Nutrition data for each ingredient should be maintained in a separate database. Due to its minimal syntax Pesto is also not suitable for extensive guides on cooking or the usual chitchat found in cooking books. Introduction by example ----------------------- So let’s start by introducing Pesto in a XXXnon-formal, XXX way: By example. We are now going to cook XXX. The following recipe contains all the information you need to do that. .. class:: todo do it. See https://github.com/PromyLOPh/rezepte for example recipes. .. include:: Pesto/Parse.lhs .. include:: Pesto/Graph.lhs .. include:: Pesto/Lint.lhs .. include:: Pesto/Dot.lhs .. include:: Pesto/Serialize.lhs Using this project ------------------ This project uses cabal. It provides the Codec.Pesto library that implements the Pesto language as described in the previous sections. It also comes with three binaries. .. include:: ../Main.lhs .. include:: ../Test.lhs .. include:: ../Doc.lhs Final words ----------- .. class:: todo Do we even need this?