10/10
10/10
10/10
I remember in high school a friend waited until 10/10/10 to ask a girl out so he'd never forget their anniversary. I think they dated for like a month lol
10/10 plan
10 percent of the time it works 10 percent.
Let me guess, instead of asking out another girl on 11/11/11 he played Skyrim?
Too late, it's 11/10/2023 in au now
How are you in november already?!?!? ^/s
Nobody woke him when September ended.
New Zealand: It's the fucking eleventh!
gotta love seeing everyone else celebrating something about the date that we are already done with
I don't get why more people don't go biggest to smallest. Makes so much more sense. Especially when listing dates in order. YYYY/MM/DD
ISO 8601, BABY!
That's how it's done in chinese. Imo DD/MM/YYYY is better though, since in practice the year is most commonly just the current year and isn't nearly as important as the day or month.
Not only that but it is different enough with the year in front that you can assume MM/DD is next. With the other two MM/DD/YYYY or DD/MM/YYYY you are stuck relying on context to fully know what format someone is using. (Unless the day in question is greater than 12.)
I would object on general principles, but....
Well...
It ain't wrong lol.
It kinda is, not everyone uses the / as separator. In Germany it's 10.10. for example
I use "-" as the separator usually, but I think they are about equivilant
Damn it! I am one day late.
10 out of 10 out of 23 are like 100%
Indonesian here, it's October 11th here.
Not just Americans https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_format_by_country
But pretty much just Americans
Unix people today : "NICE NICE"
Unix people today from 20:28:10 to 20:28:20 GMT : "NICE NICE NICE NICE"
Also looks better if you interpret it as a score than, say, a 9/11.
What happened on the 9th of November?
2023-10-10
Late, but 10/10 is my birthday - since I was born in Europe, raised in the US and now live in the UK, I've never had a problem writing my birthday correctly!
I know I'm very late now, but happy birthday!
Thank you!
Nice
October 11th, 2023
10/11/23
It's not in order but it's the same order as how dates are normally written.
Well no, normal people write 11th October 2023.
Normal people write "11. Lokakuuta 2023"
Once again Europeans assume the rest of the world is identical because Americans are the only ones bothering to correct them.
In Canada we use all three formats and have invented even more. Fucking hell.
Germany uses DMY exclusively. Why is it green instead of cyan?
According to that link, more countries use MDY in some capacity than I thought. Magenta, Red, Dark Blue, and Grey on the map are all listed as using it in the table below.
I'm not even talking about the date format, I'm talking about the date.
Not only Europeans, or Americans, or Christians. Most countries use the Gregorian Calendar either solely or additionally to a national calendar.
TIL Christian is a demonym...
Name one country thats not in America that uses mm/dd/yyyy.
To "correct" them
It’s called American Exceptionalism 🇺🇸🫡
Nothing beats ISO 8601, YYYY-MM-DD
RFC 3339! ISO 8601 has way too many weird formats that are allowed like today would be 2023-W41-2. See for example here.
I feel offended - W%W-%w is my preferred way of noting down dates :D
Whoa, that's a cool website!
Great, now I need to memorize "RFC 3339", because I officially have a new favorite date format. Thank you!
RFC 3339 when you need the basics, ISO 8601 when you need something more niche. Some applications genuinely need to view the year as weeks and days of the week instead of months and days of the month.
YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS-00:00
THE ONE TRUE FORMAT
Well, the standard provides various formats, such as YYYY-\WWW.
BCE or AD?
Does the T just signify that Time starts after it? I've never really examined the full UTC format, YYYY-MM-DD has always been enough for my uses.
I am fine with any format that puts the month between year and day.
Same, but MSD->LSD is nice in general for the alphanumeric ordering
This is the way.
The most logical format, especially for digital files.
This is the way.
Put the most significant digits first. Always.
100%
My head hurts