On May 22, 2010, at 12:07 PM, tedd <tedd.sperl...@gmail.com> wrote:

At 8:00 PM +0100 5/21/10, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
What sort of format is that date, English or American?

For example: dd-mm-yyyy or mm-dd-yyyy?

Thanks,
Ash


Ash:

I don't think it's called "English" or "American" -- as Churchill once said "We are separated by a common language." Perhaps "British English" vs "American English", but I don't think that is correct either.

While America typically uses mm-dd-yyyy the *majority* of the rest of the world uses dd-mm-yyyy -- which I think is far more logical. However, there are regions who commonly use yyyy-mm-dd (i.e., China, Japan), which is also logical.

It seems that America is the only region who mixes the most- significant-digit order (big, little, and middle endians). I don't understand why it came about, perhaps it was one of those American Almanac articles like the one that claimed using double negatives was poor grammar which caused a significant changer in the language.

In any event, in all cases where it's my choice, I use the dd-mm- yyyy format.

Cheers,

tedd
--
-------
http://sperling.com  http://ancientstones.com  http://earthstones.com

--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php


I blame Microsoft!

Personally I prefer to use yyyy-mm-dd since that is the format for many DBs

Bastien

Sent from my iPod


--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to