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Date Format

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I am an Englishman accustomed in my own usage of how to write the date. I don't only use numbers. Today's date for me is 13 Sept. Equally accurate is Sept 13

 

The numbers system used by USA and UK are both equally correct. However, it is equally true that using only numbers is confusing for each country using numbers only but only up to the month number 12. The USA also tend to put the year first in many cases. 

 

Nothing to do with logic but countries are to blame by not appreciating that there are more countries than their own, especially on the Internet, accessing information that may be date sensitive and therefore, in my opinion, there would be no confusion by anyone using the method in my first paragraph. 

 

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  • WorriedNoodle
    WorriedNoodle

  • richard_smith237
    richard_smith237

    Utterly confusing, totally unnecessary... upside-down and inside out..   Putting MM before DD in a MM-DD-YYYY format is just idiotic.   I've worked for numerous international compa

  • From a filing point of view (computers etc) year, month, day is the best process.

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1 hour ago, Swiss1960 said:

There us a clear difference between English (USA) and English (UK), just check your spell checkers

Yes its a bloody nuisance, I write a word in English and get a spell check, then it makes me think I have made a mistake but I haven't, bloody Google thinks everyone is a frigging yank.

1 hour ago, KannikaP said:

Knots = nautical miles per hour..used for Aircraft?????     Ships, yes.

Yes indeed. I was an aircraft instrument engineer in the RAF 60s/70s and Knots was the standard measurement at the time.

There may have been changes in recent times.

22 minutes ago, KannikaP said:

Why are KILOS 'ridiculous'. Metric makes far more sense, and easier to compute.

Do you want petrol to be back to 2/11d a gallon?

Quite. When the exchange rate was USD 2.40 the British penny and US penny were on par.

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2 minutes ago, sandyf said:

Quite. When the exchange rate was USD 2.40 the British penny and US penny were on par.

Those were the days my friend.

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The Americanism I find really unfathomable is the use of a weight measure (ounces) to quantify volume of liquid.

 

Perhaps in metric countries we could follow their lead:

 

         'May I have a half kilo of beer please!?'

 

Oh, and 'entree' - the French word for starter. How on earth did a word that actually sounds like 'entry' end up being the American word for the main course? Is it because TV dinners are often eaten on-a-tray'?

 

But the biggest contradiction has to be the simplification of the English language (dropping the 'u' from colour and favourite, replacing all known collective nouns with the word 'bunch') juxtaposed with the continued use of the uncessarily complicated imperial measurement system and the use of confusing, jumbled up date formats.

 

As our cousins over the pond might say 'go figure!'

 

(Not bashing Americans here, us Brits hold onto plenty of inexplicable cultural traits too ???? )

 

 

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19 hours ago, WorriedNoodle said:

MMDDYYYY-Map.jpg.c26e5aa4a84197bd4fca45d4734ca2cb.jpg

Could use the same map for those who use Fahrenheit instead of Celsius :tongue:

21 hours ago, BenStark said:

They borrowed it from that backward bred island folks, the one that still use stones for weight, who later saw the light and switched to what most of the world uses.

 

https://iso.mit.edu/americanisms/date-format-in-the-united-states/

One of the hypotheses is that the United States borrowed the way it was written from the United Kingdom who used it before the 20th century and then later changed it to match Europe (dd-mm-yyyy).

 

Americanism: Date Format

For international business comms as well as saving files on my pc, 2023-09-13 is a logical and understood format regardless of what the local format is.

3 hours ago, Henryford said:

So does the UK

The UK sells plasterboard (gyproc sheet) in Imperial length and metric width (8'*2400mm). Makes fitting them difficult, sometimes.

Related to this I suppose, I like the way in Scandinavia they put the street name first and then the number. And not only in Scandinavia but other European countries too, if memory serves. Totally logical, as first you need to know what the street is called before moving on to find the property.

3 minutes ago, Bangkok Barry said:

Related to this I suppose, I like the way in Scandinavia they put the street name first and then the number. And not only in Scandinavia but other European countries too, if memory serves. Totally logical, as first you need to know what the street is called before moving on to find the property.

Well what about the Thai method? How any delivery person ever finds the destination is a mystery to me.

Sometimes it's a mystery to them too......stuff doesn't make it, or needs a dozen phone calls plus Google maps.

2 minutes ago, Grusa said:

Well what about the Thai method? How any delivery person ever finds the destination is a mystery to me.

Sometimes it's a mystery to them too......stuff doesn't make it, or needs a dozen phone calls plus Google maps.

Indeed. That's why whenever we got deliveries such as furniture we have had to draw a map. Even for immigration to visit. In the past month, though, we had PET come to check the electric to the house and they used Google Street View for my wife to point out the house, and Global House did the same to deliver a new air-conditioner.

 

Many years ago there was talk of Thailand 'westernising' the address system but, of course, nothing came of it. But it isn't just Thailand, as Japan appears to have a similar brainless system.

3 hours ago, bignok said:

Which is not logical.

It’s very logical I’d say.

Why you think it’s not logical?

18 hours ago, KannikaP said:

Americans seem to use FEET & POUNDS more.   

Their gallon and mile are different than our originals as well

Think the miles are the same..........????

5 hours ago, Henryford said:

So does the UK

Yes & No.....????

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4 minutes ago, transam said:

Think the miles are the same..........????

Yes, 5280 feet.

Just now, KannikaP said:

Yes, 5280 feet.

If they were not the same, my drag-strip times would be very questionable.........????

How is it normally spoken, June 21st or 21 June? 

4 hours ago, swm59nj said:

And the America haters.  Most couldn’t make it living in America ......the reasons you are living in Thailand. 

I am a Yank, TWO reasons I live in Thailand:

Rent- 2 BR House with Yard, garden in gated community $135-$140USD ( exchange rate ) a month,,,,in US my 1 BR apartment is now $800.

Electric - ranged from $120 to $210 ( AC / Heat ) a month..most I have paid in Th with AC & TV,'s and etc around 12 hours a day $66USD.

Seems very practical to get as much leasure / cost benifits as possible at 77 years old.

21 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

Utterly confusing, totally unnecessary... upside-down and inside out..

 

Putting MM before DD in a MM-DD-YYYY format is just idiotic.

 

I've worked for numerous international companies and the ones which use the MM-DD-YY format always suffer some sort of delay, fault or issue as a result.

 

IMO the ONLY valid date format for international use is DD-MMM-YYYY to avoid any confusion whatsoever... i.e. 24-JAN-2024  this is complete unambiguous and removes every dash of doubt or misunderstanding.

 

 

 

You need to use year.month.day if you want computers to sort it correctly.

Whatever said and done, the US has become the most powerful country on this planet (or so we are told), went to the moon etc..... so, they must be doing something right... whatever their date format or their measuring standards are!

To have two data formats is stupid especially if one number does not exceed 12. Like
is "9/6/23" 6th of September or 9th of June ?

But there seem to be folks that measure weight in "stones". Obviously survived from some time ago.

5 minutes ago, moogradod said:

To have two data formats is stupid especially if one number does not exceed 12. Like
is "9/6/23" 6th of September or 9th of June ?

But there seem to be folks that measure weight in "stones". Obviously survived from some time ago.

survived from the "stones" age  555

5 hours ago, Swiss1960 said:

There us a clear difference between English (USA) and English (UK), just check your spell checkers

You're missing the point.  I won't explain because you probably wouldn't understand.

6 hours ago, Moti24 said:

There's only, "English".

Hold onto your blood vessels, except when it comes to spelling e.g.

Harbor

Color

etc

7 hours ago, NORDO said:

You must be referring to the USA.  The Americas have 37 Countries.

You must think that "Americans" (as used by the OP) and "The Americas" are the same thing.

6 hours ago, poppysdad said:

and having had a proper education

The irony...

6 hours ago, poppysdad said:

rediculous

 

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