
I do slashes. I also do it in the only order which is unambiguous. 5/4/2022 means either May 4th, 2022 or April 5th, 2022 depending if you are in Canada or the USA. I write the date as 2022/11/16. So May 4th is 2022/05/04 and April 5th is 2022/04/05.Random: given the choice, do you write dates with a hyphen or a slash?
11-16-2016 or 11/16/2016
Slash for me.
You're a maverick.2022.11.16
How does putting the year first eliminate the ambiguity of day/month vs. month/day?I do slashes. I also do it in the only order which is unambiguous. 5/4/2022 means either May 4th, 2022 or April 5th, 2022 depending if you are in Canada or the USA. I write the date as 2022/11/16. So May 4th is 2022/05/04 and April 5th is 2022/04/05.
There is no YYYY/DD/MM. By putting the year first, you are going biggest to smallest unit. No ambiguity.How does putting the year first eliminate the ambiguity of day/month vs. month/day?
Nobody writes the date as 2022/16/11. 2022/11/16 is not a Canadian way. The Canadian way is the British way: 16-11-2022. Which is confusing since it is opposite of the USA way of 11-16-2022. Further complicated is that not 100% of Canadians follow the British way. Some follow the American standard. Which is why I write it 2022/11/16.Any normal person who says today's date would say "November 16, 2022." Therefore the proper way to numericize the date – I don't know if "numericize" is even a word but it should be – is 11-16-2022. Canadians would write the date as 2022/16/11 but I can't imagine any Canadian saying the date is "2022, 16 November." No further questions, your honor.
I put the year first, month, then day when I name files. It’s easier to sort them on the computer. If you go month first, things are out of chronological order when you’re trying to track revisions.You're a maverick.
How does putting the year first eliminate the ambiguity of day/month vs. month/day?
If you say so. Personally, I always put the month before day, so I don't know if your theory works for the other people. But I encounter the day-before-month thing with Formula 1 schedules, which is particularly troubling when planning a trip around a race.There is no YYYY/DD/MM. By putting the year first, you are going biggest to smallest unit. No ambiguity.
It's the British/European convention. As long as they exist, this format is valid. If you ever come to Canada you will also see it more. As long as month or day is first, it will always be ambiguous.If you say so. Personally, I always put the month before day, so I don't know if your theory works for the other people. But I encounter the day-before-month thing with Formula 1 schedules, which is particularly troubling when planning a trip around a race.