• @Etterra
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        16 months ago

        You got a problem with 12 hour clocks, buddy?

    • @[email protected]
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      86 months ago

      Feel free to switch to metric time if you want. Then you can complain that Americans are still stuck on the old system.

  • FartsWithAnAccent
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    6 months ago

    American here: I find this offensive. This is clearly not an actual, functioning firearm, very unrealistic.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    YYYY/MM/DD hhmm, 24 hour clock gang unite!

    (We also support our YYYY.MM.DD and YYYYMMDD compatriots)

      • @[email protected]
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        56 months ago

        built in reminder of what each number means too!

        unfortunately I prefer 月火水木 over 星期一二三 which is a little less logical but also relates to European names and is more compact

    • @Pretzilla
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      6 months ago

      Hyphens for phone numbers

      Skip the dots for dates, or optional hyphens

  • Bahnd Rollard
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    206 months ago

    ISO-8601 exists for a reason and is better.

  • @[email protected]
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    86 months ago

    So in the US if you are telling someone a date you say something like ‘June 5Th’ (year is optional if in current year). How would people in other countries say it?

    • @Shadowedcross
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      226 months ago

      5th of June, or even still June 5th, because it doesn’t have to match the order of the date format.

      • @TaTTe
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        56 months ago

        Also in all other languages where I know how to say the date it’s some form of 5th (day of) June. While it is possible to have it the other way around it’s really only found in old writings (June’s 5th day).

    • Mr. Satan
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      56 months ago

      5th of June or June 5th, both are valid. However numeric date format has little to do with how it’s said. yyyy-MM-dd (and seperator variants) has the benefit of being orderable and indexable chronologically.

  • @[email protected]
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    56 months ago

    The maximum number of numbers for months is 12, the maximum number of days is 30 and years is infinite. Mathematically, it makes sense.

  • @TexasDrunk
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    46 months ago

    Except for the US military (unless it’s changed in the last 20 years). We used 19 May 2024.

  • @Etterra
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    16 months ago

    There’s the wrong way and the American way. DD-MM-YYYY. And keep your weird-ass punctuation marks out of it. Looking at you whichever monsters use „ as their opening quotation marks.

    Fun fact, more Americans are native English speakers than the next three countries combined. England is fifth. Which means that our way is the correct one.