Perfect date
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Immediate red flag, we all know that YYYY/MM/DD is the only acceptable perfect date
wrote on last edited by [email protected]I thought that was unix time /s
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Immediate red flag, we all know that YYYY/MM/DD is the only acceptable perfect date
Preeeety sure it's stardate.
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Don't go with this psycho! He mixes European style order with US style punctuation.
Standard in Australia. And common in the UK (it's traditionally a dot, but slash is more common now).
But I'm team ISO-8601 when there's a chance of an international audience. At least where locale information can't be used.
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I see it now FML. Editing my comment.
In your defense, it's usually denoted MMM.
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This fucknuts who thinks day should come before year, hah!
Give me YYYY-MM-DD, because dashes are better than slashes any day of the week.I prefer YYYY.MM.DD, because the dots look aesthetically pleasing when the date is being displayed within the vincity of a clock displaying the time digitally.
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Immediate red flag, we all know that YYYY/MM/DD is the only acceptable perfect date
Agreed. As a nonviolent person, I'm willing to go to war over this. Can't have two files from different years listed side by side because they were from the first day of different months. That's anarchy.
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YYYYMMDDHHMMSS is the only acceptable format.
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Waiting for the ISO 8601 & 9001 gang to show up and promote YYYY-MM-DD.
Edit: That took seconds, a very punctual bunch.
ISO thirsty!
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ISO 8601 gang.
Represent.
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Epoch, takes a bit of practice but I already read it fluently and often make fun of everyone arpund me for not knowing how to read a clock (my clock)
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I'm fine with anything in the realm of yyyymmdd or reversed, as long as it isn't the confusing format that is common in the USA
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If you use DD/MM/YYYY then logically you should also use ss:mm:hh
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I know. I started using the format with periods back in the 90s, before I knew of the standard, and at this point doing it with periods is muscle memory. That's not meant as an excuse, just an explanation. The excuse is laziness.
Best excuse
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YYYYMMDD, scrub out the excess fat!
If only there were some international standards organization to make a decision for us!
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If only there were some international standards organization to make a decision for us!
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I’m now imagining a child who must write
2026-05-10T10:06:09.426792Z
on all of their tests.It's a flexible standard.
2026-05-10T10:06:09.426792Z
,2026-05-10 10:06:09.426792Z
,2026-05-10 10:06:09.426792
, and2026-05-10
all conform to the standard. -
MM/DD/YY for me.
Edit: I learned something new today.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Same here buddy. It's what I use every day. Welcome to Lemmy, apparently being American is unwelcome around here.
Oh also. Windows, OneDrive and Google really russles some jimmies round here.
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YYYYMMDDHHMMSS is the only acceptable format.
ISO 8601 is clearly much superior due to being delimited.
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I'm the only one annoyed about DD/MM/YYYY not being a date, but a date "format"?
Not only it's a recycled joke, it doesn't even make sense.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]DD/MM/YYYY or YYYY-MM-DD are formatting conventions for expressing dates. The date itself is probably converted from some date object anyway, like the Unix Epoch, and can be expressed in any variety of formats.Wednesday, June 11, 2025 is a date.dddd, mmm dd, yyyy
or%A, %B %d, %Y
is a format.Edit: I’m pretty sure I misread the comment above.
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I thought that was unix time /s
No, it's a unix directory structure