brandnewboy [he/him] to Main • 4 years agotrump, visibly wheezing, says "MAYBE I'M IMMUNE, I DON'T KNOW"external-linkmessage-square49 fedilinkarrow-up1148file-textcross-posted to: main
arrow-up1147external-linktrump, visibly wheezing, says "MAYBE I'M IMMUNE, I DON'T KNOW"brandnewboy [he/him] to Main • 4 years agomessage-square49 Commentsfedilinkfile-textcross-posted to: main
minus-squareCarlTheRedditor [he/him]hexbear19·4 years agoThe military has this figured out. 05NOV2020 Can't read that wrong. link
minus-squarespectre [he/him]hexbear16·4 years agoThere is only one correct way to write the date as defined in the ISO-8601 standard. Anything else is incorrect. YYYY-MM-DD link
minus-squaredoublepepperoni [none/use name]hexbear4·4 years agoThat's also how it's done in Japan and probably other places, just go from largest to smallest in terms of units of time link
minus-squareMarxGuns [comrade/them]hexbear8·4 years agoLeast precise to most precise. You can truncate on the end and it still means something, just less precise. I call that a win. link
minus-squarejohn_browns_beard [he/him, comrade/them]hexbear2·4 years agoSorts perfectly in databases link
minus-squareAFoolishBaboon [none/use name]hexbear1arrow-down1·edit-22 years agodeleted by creator link
minus-squareGottaJiBooUrns [they/them]hexbear2·edit-24 years agoWhen talking about the date, do non-US countries say it like "the 6th of November" or do they also say "November 6th?" Like I get that it makes more sense to write date/month/year, but when you say it like "month/date" why not write it the same way? link
deleted by creator
The military has this figured out.
05NOV2020
Can't read that wrong.
deleted by creator
Oh honey...
deleted by creator
There is only one correct way to write the date as defined in the ISO-8601 standard. Anything else is incorrect.
YYYY-MM-DD
deleted by creator
That's also how it's done in Japan and probably other places, just go from largest to smallest in terms of units of time
Least precise to most precise. You can truncate on the end and it still means something, just less precise. I call that a win.
Sorts perfectly in databases
deleted by creator
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
cry more noob
deleted by creator
same!
When talking about the date, do non-US countries say it like "the 6th of November" or do they also say "November 6th?" Like I get that it makes more sense to write date/month/year, but when you say it like "month/date" why not write it the same way?
deleted by creator