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Writing dates
- Subject: Writing dates
- From: BestATN@xxx.xxx
- Date: Wed, 9 Jun 1999 22:46:39 EDT
In a message dated 6/9/99 9:50:30 AM Eastern Daylight Time, minots@texas.net
writes:
<< 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. >>
For over 20 years I've been writing dates in the format (cc)yymmddw, where
cc=century (optional), yy=year, mm=month, dd=day, and w=day of week (A-G,
starting with Monday), e.g.,
Today is Wednesday, June 9, 1999, so I write this date as 990609C. This is
the shortest constant length format which is easy to use. (I may start using
A-L for the month; I hadn't thought of that before.) I chose YMD because the
decimal number system has the most significant digits first, i.e. left, and I
use Monday as the starting point of the week because, even though Sunday is
the traditional American beginning of the week, it seems obvious to me that
Saturday and Sunday are the end of the week (the 'weekend'.), and that Monday
is the beginning of the week. The Russian calendar, among others, does it
this way too.
Steven