Hot take: going from biggest to smallest unit is best
It’s literally the international standard
2023-12-12T08:52:02Z
go away robot with your beep boop propaganda humans are supreme and not computers we aren’t saying our dates like a file manager
If you want a properly self-organising file structure, going by least changing unit to most changing unit is absolutely the correct way to go
ISO8601
I agree, so easy to sort stuff like that. :)
Like RFC 3339?
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i think they mean YYYY/MM/DD
Oops misread
That’s how it’s done in Canada
(other than posting too early for Americans to get the joke)
Not for us night shifters, silly
Forget about ISO 8601 and customary standards, let’s use SI units. Approximately 63 838 093.83 kiloseconds have passed since the beginning of the so-called “common era” in Greenwich.
is that fast SI seconds or slow SI seconds? (alt text)
Basically used averages:
2022 × 31 556 952 + 11 × 2 629 746 + 11 × 86 400 + [Hours] × 3 600 + [Minutes] × 60
I don’t remember the time it was when I did this lol. Basically, current date minus one and the time as is, times the average seconds for each. I just used 0001 as the “beginning of the common era” just to simplify things lol.
Edit: I used 0001 as the “beginning of the common era.”
The American system is kind of weird in some ways, but on the other hand it’s just writing it the way we say it out loud. December 12, 2023.
Do Europeans say it out loud the other way since you write it that way? 12 of December, 2023 for example.
Edit: It does sound like basically everyone writes it the way they say it out loud. Language is an interesting thing! Thanks for the insights everyone.
In the UK most folks would say it “12th of December”, prioritising the day of the month over the month…
Which begs the question, why prioritise saying the month first?
The day is going to have much more of an affect on the average person’s day to day life than what month it is, so it feels natural to prioritise stating the day first.I don’t think it’s that deep, it’s just how we say it over here. People do sometimes say it the other way, too, it’s just less common. If someone is just talking about a date in the same month we’re currently in we usually just say the number without the month (the 12th). It’s interesting to hear it really does seem to mimic the way people say it out loud in every case so far in these replies!
Well if we’re talking day to day life, when I ask someone what day it is, they’re not going to say “It’s December 12th 2023”. They’re just gonna say “The 12th” because it’s true the month doesn’t really matter day to day.
I think the only time people use the full date is on like official forms where the month is more relevant. Also this is America, we don’t care about average people’s day to day, just businesses and money and cheeseburgers
In German we also say it in the order as we write it.
12.12.2023 Zwölfter Dezember 2023 Zwölf = twelve ter = th
We say 12th December. Sooo yeah…
In Britain you could say it either way round and nobody would care. Except we tend to say *‘twelfth’ * rather than *‘twelve’ * but yeah, totally normal thing to do here.
We actually say twelfth, too, at least where I’m from, though we almost always just write the number, not the spelled out version.
Yes, saying “December 12th” sounds incredibly American to the point I can’t read it not in an American accent.
Yep, in Dutch we’d say “het is 12 December 2023”. When talking about dates I also say “it’s the 12th of December 2023” in English, but that’s probably a bit weird for English speakers.
It’s not weird for the British
I don’t think it’s weird, it just sounds a little more formal.
As an American (California native, living in the Midwest for the last decade), it’s not that weird. I hear people using “December 12th” and “12th of December” with about equal frequency. Written, though, “December 12th” is more common, and if you’re just using the numbers, everyone will assume the month is first.
It’s not weird, it’s correct
In Russia we absolutely say “12th of December, 2023”.
12 декабря 2023.
Shouldn’t there be a года at the end?
Optionally, to be more formal.
In regular conversations it is often left out
You can say two fewer words with the American version. “It’s December 12th” compared to “it’s the 12th of December”.
you don’t have to say the and of can just get reduced to the point it’s almost not even said
Let’s all say it this way now:
Today is 2023, December 12. The time as of this comment being written is 15:28 (3:28pm) GMT.
Should be UTC instead of GMT.
They’re technically the same anyway, only the name is different.
Also, I hate the name UTC, simply because the order of the letters of the acronym don’t match up with the first letters of the words of which the acronym stands for, which is Coordinated Universal Time, and not Universal Time Coordinated like I always thought.
Huh, I always thought it was French, but Wikipedia says UTC was a compromise intentionally neither French nor English. Politics is weird
Nope, in French it would TUC: Temps Universel Coordonné
That actually sounds like a cracker.
Zulu. It’s shorter and cooler
But I have to learn how to make those clicking noises first.
What does GMT stand for?
Greenwich Mean Time (because everything revolved around the British Empire)
That is indeed mean.
Thank goodness it’s not Greenwich Monstrous Time.
I still use imperial and other US standards because I was born here and have never lived anywhere else 😎
Please consider using civilised units as well
12/12/23?
This should replace the meme with the white dog.