On Sun, 02 Dec 2007 19:55:04 -0300 Martin Marques <martin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Karl Larsen escribió: > > Peter Gordon wrote: > >> On Sun, 2007-12-02 at 10:56 -0800, Brian Mury wrote: > >> > >>> I doubt it - that's in the future. Different parts of the world have > >>> different conventions for the order of the day and month. 12/06/2007 may > >>> mean 12 June to you, but it means 6 December to the OP. > >>> > >> > >> Why can't we all just follow ISO 8601 (YYYY-MM-DD) and be done with it? > >> =) > >> > > Because it was "not invented here". I have no idea why the USA uses > > mounth-day-year but we have done so all my working life. I did see > > things from Europe with the year-month-day and was not confused. But it > > can be. > > Maybe because you say "December the third" will in other languages it > "three of December" (in spanish at least). We can't all follow it because we don't all use the same date system and it has no timezone attached so it can lead to interpretation errors. Its also using a fixed 4 digit year so breaks in 10000AD but thats a minor concern. Alan -- Today is Sweetmorn, the 44th day of The Aftermath in the YOLD 3173 -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list