A funny thing about Americans and calendar dates
A funny thing about Americans and calendar dates
A funny thing about Americans and calendar dates
What do you think of DD/HH/YYYY/Min/MM/Sec?
Could be improved by swapping hours and minutes. They are more important after all.
Also that way the time isn't in order anymore.
Up until the comment thread I'd never heard an American say that at all.
And there's no proof the shithead in the comments is American. Definitely a troll though.
In any case this is easy to explain since the 4th of July was a holiday made by British citizens.
We write it how you'd say it. Outside of holidays or days of remembrance we write it how you say it.
For example today is 4/13/25. April 13th 2025. If you say the 13th of April you're fuckin weird.
And which do you ask more often what month is it or what day is it?
I don't understand how that's relevant?
That's how YOU say it. Personally, I would say the 10th of March, the 2nd of June. But then, I'm not American.
People mentioning ISOs are such forks and it's adorable
Don't mock them.
One day you will meet one in person and he'll beat you up if he's 7 foot, 3/5 thumbs and 2 elbows tall.
Foot is an SI derived unit, not familiar with the thumbs. And elbows don't get used as measurement, elbows go up.
As someone from a yyyy-mm-dd country, you're all wrong /hj
yyyy-mm-dd is specified by ISO 8601, so there's really no argument it isn't the objectively correct format.
There's also RFC3339, which is freely available and compatible with the most common ISO8501 profile.
I always use yyyy.mm.dd as my date format whenever I sign and date documents. I also use a pictograph instead of initials. Someone tried to forge a contract edit to try and get out of paying but used the mm/dd/yy format. The moment my lawyer showed this to their lawyer, they settled immediately for the original amount, legal fees, and late payment penalties. Dumbasses.
That's beautiful. I love a bit of personal standards to fuck someone else's day up.
I typically change my responses on the form to Calibri if using MS Office. It's not enough to pique anyone's interest, but it's different enough to spot what I've added to a form rather than the usual Arial additions if you've been told about it.
Someone at my office tried to say I'd said something on a form when I hadn't, and took great delight pointing out the slight difference in typeface on the field that wasn't my edit.
It's satisfying as fuck coming back at someone with receipts.
So I could use a different than usual date format for a document I might want to recall
All legal documents here use yyyy-mm-dd so I'll unfortunately won't be able to pull that :3
And what is that country? Unixopia? Linukstadt? Databaseo?
Germany officially specified it for documents for a while but that was amended to also allow for dd.mm.yyyy since not enough people actually used ISO 8601.
Lithuania if you want the serious answer :3.. china, japan, both koreas, taiwan, bhutan, mongolia and hungary also use it
But yes, im from linuxstan :3
Why can't Trump use unitary executive theory to do something good...like force everyone to use ISO 8601.
Nah. Someone would make up some convoluted and confusing template, pass it to Trump as "freedom dates", and he's sign it without reading.
And then head right back to the golf course to mooch even more tax dollars.
Would probably claim it's chinese propaganda or smth, and then go back to golfing
Doing dumb shit like imperial, farenheit and mm dd yyyy is the most conservative thing possible. By definition.
It's the only correct way to save file names
I’m similar I just don’t use - or anything. Works well when I sort concert recordings.
yyyymmdd Venue City State
As long as month goes in the middle and the year is 4 digits, no confusion.
Both are wrong. The correct way to write the date is YYYY-MM-DD. This is the only way to sort dates linearly in a list. ISO 8601.
In Arabic we use DD/MM/YYYY but it actually gets written as YYYY/MM/DD since Arabic is written and read from right to left. When the year is dropped the confusing part is not what format is used here but rather does this website/software support RTL or is it just regular unformatted ASCII.
Edit: it's still not ISO 8601 and it doesn't solve the sorting issue
I'm so glad you think we are all computers
Our lives involve computers to a huge degree.
It's frustrating that people are so bad at dates that ISO8601 lives rent-free in my head because I constantly have to tell people ;)
And, when the context of the year is understood, you can just drop it. At least Japanese does this (and I'm pretty sure Chinese does as well).
Why is the format not:
2025/4/12
Biggest time frame to smallest time frame (year, month, then day)?
ISO Tanf rise up.
Also 2025/04/12
Because humans are not computers. That scheme makes sense when you are filling out things that are not nearby in time. For example, filling in your birth date on tax forms.
Otherwise, humans don't generally need the context of the year. The same is true of the month only if the context is clear (I'll see you on the 20th implies the very next 20th). A year is much longer and most things are not planned out that far in advance. If they are, they often dont have precise dates in which case a month or even a quarter is more appropriate.
Time is also one of those things where humans are so used to contextual processing that representing the full date adds overhead. 2025/4/20, 4/20/2025, 20/4/2025 all take more processing than "the 20th" or "next Sunday".
As a computer scientist, I've been doing this everywhere for over 10 years already. Be the change you want to see in the world.
Issues with unix paths. I prefer 2025-04-12.
2009, got it
This is the way.
ISO8601 FTW!
2025/4/12
Don't forget leading zeroes, we're not half assing this!
02025/04/012
my guess is order of relevance.
In my computer engineering course this is literally how we were told to write the date on our lab reports.
For written format that is ideal but when talking about a date, say in two weeks time, saying the year is redundant.
This is how I do it- my folders and files are super easy to find
Canada uses this
yyyy/mm/dd
Coldest take: if any common date format is difficult for you, you're a little bit ridiculous
MM/DD/YYYY genuinely causes issues, because it's very easily misread by the rest of the world, and vise versa for Americans.
I have been mislead more than once, because the MM and DD are both ≤ 12.
MM/DD/YYYY needs to die
Month Day YYYY is fine, because it's unambiguous when the month is spelled out.
YYYY.MM.DD, or similar, is the only way to sort dates properly anyway.
I don't actually disagree with anything you said, I was just being a bit cheeky
It's all fun and games until someone drops a 7/4 and you don't know which country they're from
November 9 never forget.
Context clues are enough for me, 4/7 times
I only deal with people from one country, but I always write out the month so there's no confusion in important messages. Even including the day of the week as a type of verification.
I usually go for if it has a / its probably US date formate...
We use dots in our Locale
Happy not allowed! There can only be one correct date format!
What Americans are calling people idiots for saying (day) of (month)? We say it both ways all the time. 4th of July, July 4th... it's not a complicated thing.
It’s like saying USAians don’t have a sense of humour. Some USAians are MAGAt knob heads, some are perfectly reasonable people. More or less like anywhere else.
That is a weird one: every other date is “normal” order but for some reason this is an exception. Also weird that we call it with backward date more often than its actual holiday name
We don’t say July 4 because that’s a normal date, we don’t say Independence Day because there are so many of those on different days for different countries.
I like DD MON YYYY. Feels very grand and unambiguous, but people always look at me funny for using it.
I've been told I need to redo paperwork because I marked the date like 12APR2025.
I get standardization for computers, but for something a person is going to look at I feel like it's very direct, needs no explanation or interpretation. Anyone who sees it should be able to figure it out instantly.
To be fair I read it as 12A PR 2025 (yes I am stupid). It could also be the 12th version of the main PR of 2025. I'm not great with abbreviations and when it comes to months I'm also not used to it. Numbers seem superior to me.
There is very little room for interpretation even if you don't know the date format. That's BS.
With the way things are going over there, the whole thing falls apart soon enough and this issue can be fixed in the rebuild.
The holiday "The Fourth of July" happens on July 4th. Not hard.
July 4th
How many Julies do you have there in the US? 5? 7?
We had one, yes, but what about fourth July?
To be fair the holiday is actually Independence Day
None of this dumb shits going to matter when the meteor sephiroth summoned blows the earth up
Of course it will still matter. You'll need a calendar just to time out the animation for that spell it's so fucking long.
We say it thats way for the benefit of the British.
Very independent.
Don't you mean Eramicans?
Why can't we just call it Independence Day, that's what it's actually called
Sorry, that's copyrighted.
Canada’s just like you have to guess