directive0 to Star Trek Social Club@startrek.websiteEnglish • 4 months agoAugust 30th 2024. America adopts the metric system. Never forget.lemmy.worldimagemessage-square147fedilinkarrow-up1403arrow-down113
arrow-up1390arrow-down1imageAugust 30th 2024. America adopts the metric system. Never forget.lemmy.worlddirective0 to Star Trek Social Club@startrek.websiteEnglish • 4 months agomessage-square147fedilink
minus-square@Custoslibera@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglish4•edit-24 months agoHow do you abbreviate a date in YYYY/MM/DD format? In the DD/MM/YYYY format I can tell someone I am available to meet on 26/07; the year is known contextually as it only changes once a year. If I start to tell people I am available 26/07 am I available for all of July in 2026?
minus-squareHandleslinkfedilinkEnglish4•4 months agoYY/MM/DD or casual short MM/DD (where the year is understood). It’s no different, you just skip the year if it’s a given 😄 But for archival purposes, file naming etc, the YYYY part is mandatory.
minus-square@Pockybum522@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkEnglish1•1 month agoWait really? Your first example is also ambiguous for 12 years out of every 100
How do you abbreviate a date in YYYY/MM/DD format?
In the DD/MM/YYYY format I can tell someone I am available to meet on 26/07; the year is known contextually as it only changes once a year.
If I start to tell people I am available 26/07 am I available for all of July in 2026?
YY/MM/DD or casual short MM/DD (where the year is understood). It’s no different, you just skip the year if it’s a given 😄 But for archival purposes, file naming etc, the YYYY part is mandatory.
07-26, surely?
Wait really? Your first example is also ambiguous for 12 years out of every 100