X-Digest-Num: 162 Message-ID: <44114.162.953.959273824@eGroups.com> Date: Wed, 09 Jun 1999 11:09:24 -0700 From: Jim Carter Subject: Re: lo xajmi tersitna X-Yahoo-Message-Num: 953 Content-Length: 1246 Lines: 31 > John Minot writes: (Wed, 09 Jun 1999 08:53:03 -0500) > > "Evgueni.Sklyanin" wrote: > > 'day-of-week:week:day:month:year' (number of the week is usually omitted), > > for instance, Tuesday, June 8th, 1999 = 3::8:6:1999 > > > > The date is Tuesday, June 8th, 1999 = > > li ci pi'epi'e bi pi'exa pi'epasososo cu detri > > Has there ever been any dialog on why the order is month/day/year and > whether it should be so? American English is one of the few languages > in the world with that order. British English, Spanish, Russian, and > practically every language in the world (although not Japanese, which > has year/month/day) have day/month/year. ISO 8601 specifies a time part order of yyyy-mm-dd, e.g. 1999-06-09. The standard apparently is in wide use in the EU. References: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/iso-time.html -- A nice summary of ISO 8601 http://www.iso.ch/markete/8601.pdf -- The standard (14pp PDF, 130Kb) James F. Carter Voice 310 825 2897 FAX 310 206 6673 UCLA-Mathnet; 6115 MSA; 405 Hilgard Ave.; Los Angeles, CA, USA 90095-1555 Internet: jimc@math.ucla.edu (finger for PGP key) UUCP:...!{ucsd,ames,ncar,gatech,purdue,rutgers,decvax,uunet}!math.ucla.edu!jimc