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by dasil003 4934 days ago
I used to think the same way until I moved to the UK and people expressed the opinion that YYYY-MM-DD is still an American format.

I guess because for them the day always comes before month.

Nevertheless, ISO 8601 is clearly the ideal format for its sortability and consistency, cultural imperialism be damned!

3 comments

For anything handwritten (cheques, dates on signatures etc.), I use YYYY-Mmm-DD (e.g. 2012-Jan-10), as I can't imagine anyone confusing the meaning of it. I avoid DD-MM-YYYY and MM-DD-YYYY, as I usually end up having to check what I meant. No one has commented on it yet.

Typed, I use YYYY-MM-DD (e.g. 2012-01-10), mainly for its sortability.

Well, in Poland we do use D.[M]M.[YY]YY too, which is unfortunately quite popular, as a short version of the format with verbal month "D MMMMM YYYY r." (r. stands for "rok[u]", i.e. year). This long version is predominantly used in lots of official forms and letters here.
Heh. At a previous job I advocated that format so much that people thought it was a Canadian format.

They were quite surprised when I told them the actual format that was used in Canada.