Rick's b.log - 2015/03/15 |
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There's a bunch of annoying little things wrong with this.
Yesterday was Pi day...?
The time and date was 3/14/15, 9:26pm
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So, I didn't celebrate Pi day. But I did have a piece of apple pie...
hagbard, 16th March 2015, 00:56 It's a dumb British practice as middle-endian date formats were the standard in the British Empire until the early 20th C. The Americans just kept using the British standard they inherited in the 18th C. and never changed.Alex, 17th March 2015, 20:17 hagbard, I am not sure that is entirely correct. Dates were written in a variety of styles including the use of regnal dates and until the calendar reform (Julian -> Gregorian) March was the first month. You don't find dates like mm/dd/yyyy but rather dates like February I, 18 Edward II which could be translated as 1st of February in the 18th year of the reign of Edward II. Later on regnal dates became less fashionable (around the reign of Victoria). Even so the month was rarely written with a number. So there was hardly a British standard even in the United Kingdom let alone the empire. It seems possible the Americans were the first to begin writing the month as a number but in a rather illogical way, the point being that 09/03/2015 is ambiguous (September 3rd?, March 9th?) but March 9th 2015 is never ambiguous.Alex, 17th March 2015, 20:18 Meant also to say that I personally prefer the yyyy-mm-dd format despite being a Briton.
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