Poll: How do you write the date?

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rockyoumonkeys

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Aug 31, 2010
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American, so it's M/D/Y.

What I wonder (and maybe it's already been asked), but when you foreign people are actually SPEAKING the date, do you not still say "October 19th, 2010"? Or do you say "19th of October, 2010"?

Because if it's the former, which I think it must be, then I would think the american way is the right way.
 

C95J

I plan to live forever.
Apr 10, 2010
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Zeeky_Santos said:
C95J said:
Zeeky_Santos said:
C95J said:
lol, the third option is just ridiculous...
It makes it easier to store data chronologically, it makes more sense than MM/DD/YY and it's how they do it in China (which counts for something I guess)
hmmm... you are right...

the crazy Chinese are at it again!

I salute you good sir.
It's because numerically speaking, the chinese place the largest (most important) numbers at the start, the less abiguity the further along the line it gets.
the more I think about it, the more it makes sense...
 

AdmiralMemo

LoadingReadyRunner
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Dec 15, 2008
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I'm American, so I'm in the Month/Day/Year group. As with other things, such as the metric system, our date system is not as logical as the other ones, but it's so deeply-ingrained at this point that it would be tough to remove it from our collective psyche.

However, I can somewhat see the reasoning behind the Month/Day/Year format: order of importance, rather than chronology or other things. Think of an event. What is one of the first things you remember about it? How you felt, right? What's related to how you felt? Temperature/weather. Now, here's the thing. Temperature and weather vary more on a monthly basis than they do on a daily or yearly basis. Unless the weather goes from bright and sunny to hurricane the next day, the weather each day is pretty similar each day, and August 2nd might not seem so different from the 3rd or the 10th. Now compare August to other months. Comparing it to September would yield differences (unless you're in the tropics, where monthly climate doesn't change much). Compare August and September in Baltimore and you're going to have hot and cool months. Now compare 2010 to 2009, weather-wise? Not much difference, is there? So, when tracking a memory, you're most likely to recall the month before the day, and the year is typically already a given, so it's more of an afterthought.

Now, truly, that would make Year/Month/Day a more logical system, since it's from most-certain to least-certain. It is also much better to work with in computer systems than either Day/Month/Year or Month/Day/Year. (This makes cases where the year is static much easier to work with in the American system of Month/Day than the other system of Day/Month.)