Q: 13
DRAG DROP
Drag and drop the code from the bottom onto the box where the code is missing in the Ansible
playbook to apply the configuration to an interface on a Cisco IOS XE device. Not all options are used.


Your Answer
Discussion
C/D? If their YAML parser is strict, D wins, but if it's lenient, C slips through. Seen both flagged as correct in practice dumps before.
Option D, The indentation matches proper Ansible YAML, unlike C.
For these Ansible drag and drop questions, do they always mark "loose" indentation wrong or just if it obviously breaks structure? I get that option D is textbook YAML, but I've seen C work fine in real playbooks. Curious if anyone saw C accepted on recent exams?
Honestly, these drag and drop playbook questions love to trip you up with YAML formatting. From what I've seen, the exam expects perfect indentation like option D-otherwise, Ansible sometimes throws errors even if real-world servers would be fine with C. Pretty sure D is safest, but open to anyone who's tested it live.
C or D, tbh I went with C since Ansible is usually fine with looser YAML as long as keys are right. But indentation trips up a lot of people here so maybe that's why D gets picked more. Pretty sure C works but wouldn't bet my life on it.
C/D? These playbook drag and drop questions usually try to mess you up with indentation. C looks like a trap, D fits the YAML structure seen in exam reports more. Not totally sure though, did anyone get it marked correct recently?
I think C works since Ansible can sometimes be flexible with YAML in these questions.
C or D. I've seen drag/drop Ansible questions throw people off, especially with indentation and module placement. I don't think it's C though, looks more like a trap because the indentation doesn't line up with Ansible playbook YAML structure. Leaning toward D, but not 100%.
It's C, these drag and drops on Ansible are always formatted weird. Saw a similar question in some practice dumps too.
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