Why don't you? (YYYY-MM-DD)


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I've been used to write the date as 20050910 anywhere I go, but didn't really know it was actually an ISO standard. :D

date.jpg

The new format has already been adopted by many organizations worldwide. And many more should do so ? to make their own lives simpler. And everybody else's.

http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/p...tesandtime.html

Why don't you:):)

Cheers,

McoreD

2005-09-10

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Yes; I love the fact that it is actually an ISO standard. My colleagues used question me about this whenver they saw me writing the date this way.

From the ISO.org page:

Date and time represents a specified time of a specified day. When use is made of the calendar date the representation is:

YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss

where the capital letter T is used to separate the date and time components. Thus, for a very precise date and time, look at this:

Example: 2003-04-01T13:01:02 represents one minute and two seconds after one o'clock in the afternoon of 2003-04-01.

I used the actual day to seperate date and time. Example:

2003-04-01TUE13:01:02

2005-09-10SAT09:16:20

Guess I should get used to the ISO 8601 standard.

Yes; I love the fact that it is actually an ISO standard. My colleagues used question me about this whenver they saw me writing the date this way.

From the ISO.org page:

Date and time represents a specified time of a specified day. When use is made of the calendar date the representation is:

YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss

where the capital letter T is used to separate the date and time components. Thus, for a very precise date and time, look at this:

Example: 2003-04-01T13:01:02 represents one minute and two seconds after one o'clock in the afternoon of 2003-04-01.

I used the actual day to seperate date and time. Example:

2003-04-01TUE13:01:02

2005-09-10SAT09:16:20

Guess I should get used to the ISO 8601 standard.

586502431[/snapback]

:laugh: Go out and have some fun sir

hmm this is the way the chinese/japanese/not sure who else have been writing their dates for like thousands of years (i've written it that way in class for letters and stuff)

i personally prefer the DD-MM-YYYY format :laugh: i'm always confused when i see something thats in MM-DD-YYYY.

I only understand and use DD/MM/YY or DD/MM/YYYY or something along the lines of >10th September 2005<

I confuses the arse off me when no-UK people use MM/DD/YYYY especially when the day value is below 12 :rolleyes:

I only understand and use DD/MM/YY or DD/MM/YYYY or something along the lines of >10th September 2005<

I confuses the arse off me when no-UK people use MM/DD/YYYY especially when the day value is below 12  :rolleyes:

586504594[/snapback]

i think it ssomething to do with how they say the dates. i guess that the majority of them said "September 24th 1785" rather than "24th September 1785". and it stuck. hence the mm/dd/yyyy

Everything except DD-MM-YYYY makes me completly confused...

586504462[/snapback]

I only understand and use DD/MM/YY or DD/MM/YYYY or something along the lines of >10th September 2005<

I confuses the arse off me when no-UK people use MM/DD/YYYY especially when the day value is below 12  :rolleyes:

586504594[/snapback]

ditto, same here.

its just confusing when some people put the month first :s

The reason why US uses MM-DD-YYYY is because of how it's spoken. You say "Today is September 10th, 2005." In the romantic languages though (Spanish, French, Italian) you say it DD-MM-YYYY as in "Hoy es el 10 de septiembre del 2005."

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