88 0 ReplyDD/MM/YYYY is the best in my opinion
78 0 Reply09.08.2023 (dd/mm/yyyy) anybody?
60 0 ReplyISO 8601 or nothing. Descending order of granularity, keep everything sorted as it should be!
55 0 ReplyLast two are both dumb, YYYY-MM-DD or DD-MM-YYYY or go home
Yes I'm American
33 0 ReplyThe last two are the same thing though
31 0 ReplyCan’t believe relevant xkcd hasn’t been posted.
29 0 ReplyI swear, a lot of you would have no joy in life if you weren't able to bitch about the stupidest shit.
28 0 Reply09/08/2023 (I'm an American who doesn't care what everyone in my country uses if that "custom" is nonsense...)
27 0 ReplyReddit ass post
24 0 ReplyDate stamps are stupid, but they're nowhere near as stupid as this attempt to criticize them
19 0 ReplyI've said it before and I'll say it again. Americans write the date the way we would say it. August 9th 2023.
16 0 Reply9AUG2023
14 0 ReplyOh no! A country uses a different date format, the horror!
13 0 ReplyIt's by smallest integer to largest, what's weird about that?
12 months a year, up to 31 days a month and X number of years. It makes the most sense
12 0 ReplyUnix time is the best format
10 0 ReplyIf it’s a file I want sorted by date the top is good. If I am talking about a date and spelling it out August the 9th of 2023 makes the most sense and seems natural, and if it’s a personal memo or date label on food I just use 08/09 with the zeros so I know it isn’t a fraction unless it’s frozen or shelf stable for long term storage where the year would be useful to know at which point it becomes 8/9/23
I thought everybody used different date formats based on need.
9 0 ReplyThe way I see it, the US just writes it the way it's spoken. "August 9th, 2023" vs. "the 9th of August, 2023".
8 0 Reply13/AUG/2023
8 0 ReplyThe first and the last date format are terrible because you can confuse the day of the month with the number of the month.
I only like date formats where it's not possible to confuse any field, like 8 Aug 2023. I minimize ambiguity.
If the date is in a file name, I make an exception using 2023-08-09 such that a string sort is equal to a date sort.
8 0 Reply23/12/08
7 0 ReplyGonna cry?
7 0 ReplyAlright, then I guess change the way you read a clock too... My day to day use doesn't include the year at all. Just mm/dd
6 0 ReplyI don't know why you wanted to know year before month or day, I use dd/mm/yyyy sometime I didn't even use yyyy just dd/mm because day change most frequent then month then year
6 0 ReplyThese are the right dates
5 0 ReplyI like to think of the American style as machete ordering for dates.
4 0 ReplyMonths are dumb. Inconsistent lengths, the names are out of sync (OCTober isn't month 8), pretend to be based on lunar cycles but not, etc.
Give us Year/Day date formats. Extra new year holiday on leap years.
3 0 Reply🧐 4 Days ago
3 0 ReplyNah the middle one is the easiest to read.
2 0 Reply(1-12)/(1-31)/(XXXX)
I don't think it's an entirely ridiculous format.
2 0 ReplyISO standards... unbelievable how many people don't get it!
1 0 ReplyOne of my biggest gripes when I worked at Walmart in the claims dept.
I would always have to double check items because some are sources from the US and use the US date format while the rest is in the normal format.
BB really needs to have what format was used or labels need to be printed for US sources pantry items.
1 0 Reply