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dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
shortest to longest
mm/dd/yyyy is just confusing; you're always unsure of what is what the only rational explanation i ever got was "well, you say *june fifth* so that sort of makes sense going 06/05 but still smallest to largest makes more sense |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
I've grown accustomed to mm/dd/yyyy so its the form I use.
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Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
Typically use mm/dd/yyyy for dating simple things...what used through school.
For my own records I use yyyy/mm/dd. Makes the most sense trying to find something. |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
Month/Day/Year seems to be the common thing here in the States (I think), but I've seen others as well. In general I get confused in the UK/Europe because on a calender September 15th will be listed as 15/9 and it always gets me. When I think about my birthday I think month/day/year, I dunno, it's what we grew up on writing in school notebooks, you can't really change that in your brain.
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Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
month/the birthday of the closest family member born in that month/century/day of the week/date/decade/year
perfect EDIT: Today is 6/17/21/F/05/00/9 |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
Well here in Japan they do year/month/day, which i occationally find confusing. I personally think the day/month/year standard is the most logical, it's chronological and you're refering to a particular day when you write a date, so it makes sense you write the day first. Coincidentally, this particular issue has bothered me recently, and i haven't found an oppertunity to talk about it because it seemed a little trivial. I thank the flamb.
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Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
Today in Europe it's 6-6-09. Oh, bad example. dd/mm/yy(yy).
I get really confused with the American system and it doesn't make sense to me. You're going from medium to small, to large. I voted yyyy/mm/dd because a thesis supervisor taught me that. It's very useful to find stuff chronologically. |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
dd/mm/yyyy
When you are talking about a date you may be asked, 'what day/what month/what year' so this order makes far more sense to me. I never understood the American way of writing it, it is not logical to me. When we say the date in the UK we would not say 'It's June the 6th' we would say 'It's the 6th of June' if speaking in correct English. This is one of those little things that gets on my nerves, something else is when people put Sunday as the first day of the week, it's not, Monday is. Sunday is the last day of the week. While we are on the subject I also hate clocks that have roman numerals on and instead of using the correct characters for 4 which are IV they put IIII. You even get this on antique clocks, and it is wrong. Why do they do this, Why? |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
Just guessing here, but perhaps the American way came from the usual way of saying a date in English in the U.S. -- e.g. it's August 30th, 1984.
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Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
So what do you say if asked your date of birth?
In my case I would say - 'The Second Of The Seventh, Eighty Four.' If I said it the American way would I have to say? 'The Seventh Month And The Second Day Of Eighty Four' ... It just does not sit right with me. EDIT: It's not that the differences 'really' bother me. I just think some things are silly because they are not logical to me. I guess I should remember there is a difference between English English and American English. IIII on a clock is just pathetically stupid though. I am not trying to shit on anyones cultural differences, thats just the way I feel. |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
Well for one, I've never heard of saying the month as a number in regular speech. Do you really say "The Second of the Seventh"?
I would say (and as far as I know this is the typical way throughout the U.S.) is exactly as I wrote it -- August Thirtieth, Nineteen-Eighty-Four (perhaps shortened to just Eighty-Four). Which matches to the way we typically write by numbers -- 08/30/1984. |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
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I dont usually speak my own language properly though so I will say July the Second on occasion if asked when my birthday is. So I suppose I contradict myself there. |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
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I think the weirdness just becomes with the muscle memory of writing it the way we do. For whatever reason I was taught to write 8/15/85 for the date above, and if I saw it as 15/8/85 it would take me a second because my brain doesn't immediately recognize that pattern. I understand why both sides think the other is strange, mainly because we didn't learn it that way. EDIT: Mana stole my thunder, whoops. Heh. |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
mm/dd/yyyy
I find that's typically how it is shorthand, and I find it less confusing, personally. |
Re: dd/mm/yyyy is the way to go, imo
mm/dd/yyyy is my favorite. Used yyyymmdd in the military, which makes it easier to sort with a computer, but I'm not a computer. Use mm/dd/yyyy.
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