yes you are right.. my code example wasn't tested in this thread. My actual
use case does have the brackets.
On Monday, November 7, 2016 at 12:03:58 PM UTC-6, Guy Matz wrote:
>
> I think you want {{ item.0.name }}
>
> On Thu, Oct 13, 2016 at 2:21 PM, Slavek Jurkowski > wr
>
> tasks:
> - authorized_key: user=item.0.name key="{{ item.1 }}"
> with_subelements:
> - "{{ users }}"
> - authorized_keys
> On Oct 13, 2016, at 1:14 PM, Joanna Delaporte
> wrote:
>
> Slavek,
>
> I converted my dicts to lists. :P It
re appear to be a bunch of one-off non-interoperable looping
> constructs designed for very narrow purposes. This is easily the most
> frustrating aspect of using Ansible for anything non-trivial.
>
> On Thursday, October 13, 2016 at 10:10:32 AM UTC-5, Slavek Jurkowski wrote:
&g
Hi Peter,
Did you find a solution to this? I'm facing the same issue and it sure
sucks!
Thanks
On Wednesday, April 6, 2016 at 5:47:01 PM UTC-5, Peter Thorson wrote:
>
> when using with_dict, item.key retrieves the dict key and item.value
> retrieves the value.
>
> however, when using with_sub
Joanna,
Did you find any solution to this? I'm facing the same issue and it sure
sucks!
Thanks!
On Wednesday, June 29, 2016 at 1:43:39 PM UTC-5, Joanna Delaporte wrote:
>
> Here's my version: ansible 2.2.0 (devel 87928ff56b) last updated
> 2016/06/22 13:32:23 (GMT -500)
>
> I'm not sure if thi