Angevin Well-known member Oct 21, 2016 #3 No because it is the right way to write it... shortest to longest.
Doctor The Immortal Fallen Angel Oct 21, 2016 #4 What does the option "I should?" even mean? I use the Day/Month/Year Hours:Minutes. My way is the best way. Everyone else way is incorrect and stupid.
What does the option "I should?" even mean? I use the Day/Month/Year Hours:Minutes. My way is the best way. Everyone else way is incorrect and stupid.
I Infinite Citadel Odium Oct 21, 2016 #5 Angevin said: No because it is the right way to write it... shortest to longest. Click to expand... Agreed - but I live in a dumb country
Angevin said: No because it is the right way to write it... shortest to longest. Click to expand... Agreed - but I live in a dumb country
Micchan Forum Fighter Guru Oct 21, 2016 #7 Infinite Citadel said: Agreed - but I live in a dumb country Click to expand... No one is perfect.
Bear Technically in the Orderless Order Oct 21, 2016 #8 21/10/2559 Introducing the Thai calendar date where we are over 500 years ahead of everyone else for no apparent reason
21/10/2559 Introducing the Thai calendar date where we are over 500 years ahead of everyone else for no apparent reason
Sargun High Prince of War Oct 21, 2016 #9 Infinite Citadel said: Agreed - but I live in a dumb country Click to expand... You don't say "today is 21 October" you say "today is October 21st" that means the way we write dates is totally normal
Infinite Citadel said: Agreed - but I live in a dumb country Click to expand... You don't say "today is 21 October" you say "today is October 21st" that means the way we write dates is totally normal
F Fanag Active member Oct 21, 2016 #10 I prefer this style, but I use M/D/Y as well. "Today is the 21st of October" makes complete sense. "Fourth of July." Last edited by a moderator: Oct 21, 2016
I prefer this style, but I use M/D/Y as well. "Today is the 21st of October" makes complete sense. "Fourth of July."
Angevin Well-known member Oct 21, 2016 #11 We all know the British invented time so the correct way is D/M/Y
A Adolinia Member Oct 21, 2016 #12 YYYYMMDD is the best date format clearly, because it naturally sorts correctly. MMDDYY is however an acceptable choice for true blooded Americans.
YYYYMMDD is the best date format clearly, because it naturally sorts correctly. MMDDYY is however an acceptable choice for true blooded Americans.
Lordship Honor Oct 21, 2016 #14 What triggers me is not the format but rather the fact that you wrote the date from 76 years ago.
japan77 High Prince of Growth Oct 21, 2016 #16 I write the day in every way. use MM/DD/YYYY on regular basis DD/MM/YYYY on formal papers YYYY/MM/DD when doing anything in japanese or chinese, and feel like using the European year, rather than the Japanese or chinese calendar years.
I write the day in every way. use MM/DD/YYYY on regular basis DD/MM/YYYY on formal papers YYYY/MM/DD when doing anything in japanese or chinese, and feel like using the European year, rather than the Japanese or chinese calendar years.