March topic(s) for BLU
Matt Shields
mattboston at gmail.com
Fri Mar 2 16:04:49 EST 2007
That's true, but that's how computer people think. I do that as well
when I program. But that's not how most people speak, at least here
in the US especially when talking about (not programming) dates.
matt
On 3/2/07, Kristian Hermansen <kristian.hermansen at gmail.com> wrote:
> On 3/2/07, Matt Shields <mattboston at gmail.com> wrote:
> > To Americans day/month sounds backwords, when we're talking about
> > dates we say March 21st. If you write that out it would be 3/21/2007.
> > But if you're not in the US, does it really matter? Do you plan on
> > coming here for that meeting? I understand there are lots of people
> > not in the Boston area on this list because it's a good list for the
> > Linux community, but why do you care that the meeting is on 3/21 or
> > 21/3? If I were to join a UK mailing list I wouldn't demand that they
> > follow US date standards.
>
> It gets confusing when you say things like '...the meeting will be
> 11/10'. Is that November 10 or October 11th? You can never get it
> wrong when you use a standard mathematical notation where most
> significant digit is to the left as in 20071011, which makes more
> sense. It's always best to put your most significant digits first.
> Think about the nightmare of a directory listing on your OS if you
> didn't use this method and your filenames were ordered by date...
> --
> Kristian Hermansen
>
--
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