Poll: Dating...help me solve this problem

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Phoenixlight

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Aug 24, 2008
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Well being English and logical it would seem that day/month/year would be the most appropriate going from the smallest measure of time to the largest.
 

Matt King

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Mar 15, 2010
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the standerd like what people use in school is day/month/ year (i live in uk so might be different)
 

no one really

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Nov 18, 2009
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I'm SO sick of people with dating problems...
Oh, callendar date format problems, I see. >.>
It's D/M/Y for most, so that is the standard. However, "It's cewl to be different".
 

Slycne

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Feb 19, 2006
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Day/Month/Year is incapable of celebrating Pi Day and is thus a flawed system. After a couple years working in a pharmacy and time spend in the Army, I got used to Month/Day/Year and Day/Month/Year.
 

aashay

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Mar 16, 2010
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Personally i always write it YYYY/MM/DD. There is a reason to this:
When you write the date in this fashion you can easily sort the fields chronologically by simply sorting based on characters. All entries are first sorted by Year then month and then by date.

I suspect this is why the US started using MM/DD so that at least for the year, everything can be sorted - although I have no idea why they didn't take this to its logical completion (yyyy/mm/dd).

I was born and raised in a Commonwealth nation and so I always say the date as "16th of march" and growing up i used DD/MM/YYYY but as I have explained, my current system makes sorting pictures, videos etc. much easier.
 

ItsAChiaotzu

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Apr 20, 2009
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Seldon2639 said:
KillerMidget said:
I hate the Month/Day/Year version.

Just why?

Day/Month/Year is so much easier, plus it's in bloody order! From smallest amount of time to largest.
Think about saying it aloud.

We say "March sixteenth, twenty-ten", not "sixteen, March, twenty-ten".

Month/Day/Year is reflective of spoken English.
Um, no, it's reflective spoken AMERICAN English.
 

jake557

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May 30, 2008
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Helpful little diagram courtesy of wikipedia:


Blue represents countries that use DD/MM/YYYY
Red represents countries that use MM/DD/YYYY
Yellow represents countries that use YYYY/MM/DD
Green and brown represnt countries where two or more variations are used

*edit*
Whoops, sorry I stretched the forum
 

bassdrum

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Oct 6, 2009
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That title brought me here expecting a socially awkward compatriot, but no...

OT: I'm Month/Day/Year, but that doesn't necessarily mean that that's how it should be. As long as there's just one convention, I'll go along with it.
 

Skratt

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Dec 20, 2008
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Conversation: "What is the date?" "March 13"

When giving a name to a file on a computer that must contain reference to the date you should ALWAYS start with Year then Month then Day in NUMBERS only or else it doesn't sort by file name correctly. 20100313myfile.txt or myfile20100313.txt is fine, but 03132010myfile.txt is wrong and you should be slapped if you do this.

As for everything else on a computer, as long as the computer can put it in proper chronological sequence, it can display it however it wants.

As for writing the date on paper: March 13, 2010 is fine. Most people are only looking for the Month and Day anyhow (at least in the US).
 

Seldon2639

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Feb 21, 2008
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ShredHead said:
Seldon2639 said:
KillerMidget said:
I hate the Month/Day/Year version.

Just why?

Day/Month/Year is so much easier, plus it's in bloody order! From smallest amount of time to largest.
Think about saying it aloud.

We say "March sixteenth, twenty-ten", not "sixteen, March, twenty-ten".

Month/Day/Year is reflective of spoken English.
Um, no, it's reflective spoken AMERICAN English.
Well, given that American English is the only English that matters anymore, it should be our idioms and idiosyncrasies that dominate, shouldn't it?

Please read that with a lighthearted tone.

Yes, I know, we've already discussed that the English used elsewhere is reflective of the different ordering convention
 

Alex The Rat

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Jan 8, 2010
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Baradiel said:
Americanisation annoys the hell out of me! Day/Month/Year is the sensible, normal, perfectly-fine way of doing it.

Seriously, when America declared its independence, did they all think "I know what'll annoy the Brits more than breaking off from them and fighting a war against them! Let's fuck around with everything! Destroy all calendars! We'll make our own! English isn't efficient enough! Let's take out half the letters and change words, then add 'American' to the beginning, which instantly makes it better!"

If so, they were right. Its so much more annoying than simply declaring independence.
I bet George Washington would be proud that the nation he helped found still annoys Brits to this day ;)

Really though, the un-american (read: anti-freedom) way of doing it makes more sense. I am American, but I'm also all for the metric system and some date rearranging (still iffy on the 24 hour clock...)
 

Andrecova

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Sep 24, 2009
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Day/Month/Year is what makes the most sense, and how we mostly do it around here, although I've got partially used to both versions because of the Internet.

It's still confusing sometimes, though.
 

JMeganSnow

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Aug 27, 2008
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Baradiel said:
Americanisation annoys the hell out of me! Day/Month/Year is the sensible, normal, perfectly-fine way of doing it.

Seriously, when America declared its independence, did they all think "I know what'll annoy the Brits more than breaking off from them and fighting a war against them! Let's fuck around with everything! Destroy all calendars! We'll make our own! English isn't efficient enough! Let's take out half the letters and change words, then add 'American' to the beginning, which instantly makes it better!"

If so, they were right. Its so much more annoying than simply declaring independence.

---

Just one of my pet hates.
Actually, in a lot of cases America uses the "old" way of doing things and other countries have changed in the meanwhile--the larger the population, the more conservative they tend to be. Keep in mind that for a long time there wasn't standardized spelling or, really, standardized anything.

I got used to using d/m/y in Germany, but people complained so I switched back. I don't think it matters, ultimately. You write it in such a way that you'll understand it and other people likely to read it will understand it. If it's really freakin' important, just stop being a lazy ass and write the whole thing out.
 

Jedoro

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Jun 28, 2009
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It should be Day/Month/Year but everyone here (read: America) loves having the month first for some reason.
 

Baldry

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Feb 11, 2009
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Hmm looks like im the only one who puts the year in the middle, lucky me!!! 16/10/03
 

Saul B

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Feb 9, 2009
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Seldon2639 said:
KillerMidget said:
I hate the Month/Day/Year version.

Just why?

Day/Month/Year is so much easier, plus it's in bloody order! From smallest amount of time to largest.
Think about saying it aloud.

We say "March sixteenth, twenty-ten", not "sixteen, March, twenty-ten".

Month/Day/Year is reflective of spoken English.
Ah but I can turn that on its head by saying "16th of the 3rd 2010"

Silly Americans! But seriously there should be some kind of standards, otherwise its quite confusing some of the time. (e.g. 3/2/10 - is that the 2nd of March or the 3rd of Feb?)