The '-' is a tr(1) call away, but I don't see the point, and using '/' emphasizes the fs structure and that the urls are 'hackable' (as the latest buzzword goes).
uriel On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 6:34 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: > * markus schnalke <[email protected]> [2009-03-11 16:42]: >> [2009-03-11 16:10] yy <[email protected]> >> > OTOH, a >> > yyyy/mm/dd structure is convenient to organize months and years in a >> > tree structure, i.e. directories >> >> If yyyy/mm/dd depicts a path, I agree. Anyway, in this case it's the >> only way, as slash separates files in a path. > > One can use the standard for representation, i.e. show 2042-03-11 _and_ > store files in 2042/03/11 ( ... as was the intention when time was invented > :o) ). > What's the problem? > > Well, this will effectively result in URLs like > http://foo.bar.bg/posts/2042/03/11/date-format-is-confusing.html which may > be a bit confusing for some people, but the context (hierarchical > structure) should prompt what date it is supposed to be. (if one is aware > of what the intention was when time was invented) > :o) > > -- > cheers > stanio_ > >
