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by Thorrez
895 days ago
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>dd.mm.yyyy is better because it’s in an order, DD/MM/YYYY vs MM/DD/YYYY each have pros and cons. I don't think we can objectively say 1 is better than the other. I agree YYYY-MM-DD is best. The standard is YYYY-MM-DD, not YYYY.MM.DD, so the dashed version is better than the dot version. >People who use mm.dd.yyyy in English text with no indication that they’re American, writing for Americans, have no place on this planet. Joking not joking. The same would apply to dd.mm.yyyy or dd/mm/yyyy with people who don't indicate what country they're from. A few other countries use DD/MM/YYYY: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_format_by_country |
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:) yeah I'm fine with either. Just typed with dots out of habit.
> The same would apply to dd.mm.yyyy or dd/mm/yyyy with people who don't indicate what country they're from. A few other countries use DD/MM/YYYY
I thought maybe that was a typo and you meant "A few other countries use MM/DD/YYYY"? But then I looked on that page and only saw a few places that use a variety. Usually when a country uses multiple standards for anything, it's a sign that one of them is "token". For example English is one of two official languages in India:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India
English would be widely spoken there, but it's widely spoken everywhere without being an official language.
So if we take countries that say "yeah whatever, we'll do MM/DD/YYYY too", that leave America ;)