• @protput@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Too long. Even 2023-08-09 is too long for me. But since I like the readability I use 2023.08.09. Less pixels and more readable then 20230809.

      • @railsdev@programming.dev
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        911 months ago

        You should be localizing it before displaying to users. Let their browser/platform decide.

        Personally I can’t stand the format you’ve shown. I also can’t stand periods being used for phone numbers, e.g. 555.555.5555.

        • @Aloha_Alaska@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          My company has decided to standardized on phone numbers with dots instead of dashes. They’re in email signatures, memos, client proposals. I absolutely hate it and it rubs me the wrong way every time I see it. It’s wrong.

          • @Samsy@lemmy.mlOP
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            111 months ago

            In Germany this is standardized, too. DIN 5008 for phone numbers. Areacode Number-extension. For example 0123 456789-01

            • @railsdev@programming.dev
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              011 months ago

              I use a standardization library for phone numbers. It makes parsing any user input dead easy, storing it as a standard string (can’t think of the standard name) and then outputting in the country’s respective format. I don’t have to inject a bunch of JavaScript crap that’s like “wrong format” and harass users; the backend sorts it all out.

      • @jerkface@lemmy.ca
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        211 months ago

        Same number of pixels, they are just different colours. But you still paid for them.

      • @Pinklink@lemm.ee
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        211 months ago

        Although I actually like that format a lot, we use characters to help elicit context. 2023/08/09 is fine since we have been using / for dates for so long. Also it blows my mind why people don’t use : in 24 hour times. 16:40 is great, no am pm bullshit and you immediately know I’m talking time.