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Your Blog, 5. February 2010
Message
From
13/03/2010 09:38:35
 
 
To
12/03/2010 17:32:30
Dragan Nedeljkovich (Online)
Now officially retired
Zrenjanin, Serbia
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Environment versions
Visual FoxPro:
VFP 9 SP2
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01454095
Message ID:
01454296
Views:
39
Hi Dragan,

in Germany we usually use date format DD.MM.YY. However I really don't like this format from a programmers point of view. But this is the same for the american format , too. I'd prefer a format like YY.MM.DD by default. This would make much more sense for any kind of sorting timestamps, that i.e. for some reason can only be sorted alphanumerical.
This is i.e. what often happens with file names these days. We have to sort files with identical creation dates (down to seconds) that have a timestamp within their filename. But formatted like ddmmyyhhmmss there is no quick way for a sort. Formatted like yymmddhhmmss this could be done alphanumerical by design.

>>>>>IMHO, if you give a reference to a blog, you need to provide a link. I'm not going to try to figure it out without a direct link - the blog may have many entries - how would I find the right one.
>>>>
>>>>I have no idea how to do this, that's the reason of the title and the text in the inital message.
>>>
>>>I just love the "make link" plugin for Firefox. And on blogger, the link under the blog (with datetime as text, or the one with "1 Kommentare") leads to a page which contains only that blog plus comments. For UT, I select HTML type link (there are also forum code links, just text and markdown - still don't know what the last one does), and I get this: Freitag, Februar 05, 2010.
>>>
>>>p.s. I find it sheer colonial behavior that Blogger makes German dates in American format.
>>
>>I understand nothing. But never mind, I'm off for weekend anyway.
>
>Do you ever write month first, then day in German?
Best Regards
-Tom

Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it.

Oh, and BTW: 010101100100011001010000011110000101001001101111011000110110101101110011
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