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by bearmode
998 days ago
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>How do you write the time? Do you put seconds or minutes before hours? Why not? No, because the seconds are rarely important. >How do you write the year? Do you put decade before century? No, because that's not how numbers work. >How do you write numbers? Do you put the ones place before the tens? Same answer. >Toddmorey asked why units don’t go from small to large and I explained that it is inconsistent with how we write numbers. Dates aren't numbers. There is a lot more context and meaning around dates that we need to consider when we verbalise and write them. But, for the purposes of e.g. data storage then absolutely - we can consider them no different from numbers. You have to understand that isn't the case with conversational English, though. |
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Yes, conversational english is arbitrary. The preference there is the familiar so the listener understands. But both commonly used date formats (MM/DD/YYYY HH:MI:SS and DD/MM/YYYY HH:MI:SS) are inconsistent and arbitrary. You can’t say one makes more sense than the other because that’s just a matter of personal familiarity.