• @Cruxifux
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    891 year ago

    Ok what is this 12mn 12nn madness

    • *Tagger*
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      451 year ago

      I assumed NooN and MidNight

      • @Cruxifux
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        551 year ago

        Oh I know what they put them there for. I just find it obscene.

        • *Tagger*
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          231 year ago

          I dunno, people get confused by 12pm often, this feels like a relatively elegant solution.

          • Dojan
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            321 year ago

            Solution could be to learn what AM and PM means. Ante meridiem (before midday) and post meridiem (after midday).

            Or use 24h time. Then you can omit the midday factor altogether.

            • @[email protected]
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              351 year ago

              Well, the definitions aren’t really all that helpful. 12pm is neither before nor after midday, while 12am is exactly 12 hours before and after midday.

              • @LordOfTheChia
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                61 year ago

                Easy way to think about it is that 12 is actually the 0th hour.

                0 AM and 0 PM make more sense.

                I wish everyone just used military time.

                0:00 to 23:59. Nothing to screw up.

              • Dojan
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                -101 year ago

                Okay if somehow one can’t figure out that night comes after day, then one can hopefully count and know that 12 comes after 1. 1AM is in the middle of the night so 11 hours later, 12AM would be noon. 12AM obviously doesn’t come before 1AM, thus midnight is 12PM, because midnight is when one day rolls over to the next and you get morning (or before midday) again.

                • @[email protected]
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                  241 year ago

                  Crazy thing is I can’t tell if you explained it incorrectly on purpose to show how confusing it is, or if you did it accidentally.

                • @[email protected]
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                  221 year ago

                  Except the most widespread definition is the other way around: 12am is midnight and 12pm is noon. As that source argues, 12:01 during the day is clearly after noon, so it must be pm.

                  In the end my point stands: You can argue both ways and it is confusing.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    81 year ago

                    I think it would be weird going from 12am (ante meridiem = before noon) to 12:01pm (post meridiem = after noon), therefore 12pm must come right before 12:01pm, so 12pm is noon.

          • @Pregnenolone
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            English
            41 year ago

            If you don’t know what nn and mn mean it means nothing.

            • @[email protected]
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              41 year ago

              I can never differ between am and pm, because we don’t use that here - well, at least I always mix it up

              mn instead was very intuitive