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One hour time difference?
Message
De
29/10/2008 08:43:25
 
 
À
29/10/2008 08:42:00
Information générale
Forum:
Level Extreme
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01357638
Message ID:
01357995
Vues:
29
>>>>Unless Belize or Kenya changed recently, they too use mm/dd/yyyy. Also Puerto Rico, Phillipines, (I think all territories, common wealths, and possessions do, but not sure).
>>>>
>>>>Some places in Canada used to use mm/dd/yyyy. I saw it myself on numerous occasions visiting Canada. I guess that changed across Canada during the last few years though.
>>>
>>>It depends entirely on what you were looking at. In the programs we do here, I normally use mm/dd/yyyy because it seems to be creeping into the culture more (of course, I make it clear - ie - Date (mm/dd/yyyy):, but governments, official bodies etc still use dd/mm/yyyy. Officially, Canada is dd/mm/yyyy.
>>>
>>>I think the world should definitely go yyyy/mm/dd which we all know is the only sensible way to do it.
>>
>>In what way is it "the only sensible way to do it."?
>>
>>We think in terms of the days passing, within the months (passing) within years
>>Steps within steps - seems most logical to me.
>>
>>If you're referring to the date format being used in maths functions then maybe y/m/d is more sensible, but the average Joe isn't using the format for that.
>
>It also makes more sense for sorting information. Also, I believe that most things should be referred to in terms from largest container to smallest.

So if I ask you when you where born would you tell me year then month then day ?


>
>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>AFAIK, Only the US uses mm/dd/yyyy... Our canadian clients use either dd/mm/yyyy or yyyy/mm/dd. All of europe uses dd/mm/yyyy, though the seperator could be different: ( '/' , '-', '.').
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>>Is Canada day/month? I did not know that!
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