xterra
So far, so good...
The EU wants to abolish summer/winter changeover.
The EU should talk to Mother Nature about this.
The EU wants to abolish summer/winter changeover.
How did they distinguish between 06-07-2019 (dd-mm-yyyy) and 06-07-2019 (mm-dd-yyyy)?
Today is 18 Jul 2019 for me. The first day of next month will be 01 Aug 2019. It's unambiguous. If I have to deal with other languages and don't know the month names, or when I'm programming, I use yyyy-mm-dd, which is also unambiguous (and sorts properly, too!).
As for spelling things aloud on the phone, I like to make up my own names on the fly, usually drawn from Shakespeare, Tolkien, Harry Potter, or the subject matter being discussed. This is almost always an entertaining interaction...at least for me.
obxkcd: 1179: ISO 8601 (Be sure to read the mouseover text.)
A for 'orses
B for wellington
can't remember the rest
g for police
I'll look it up next week if noone else does.
They had two pieces of information: The date string itself, and the state that issued the ID. Knowing which state issued the ID tells them which format to assume for the date string.How did they distinguish between 06-07-2019 (dd-mm-yyyy) and 06-07-2019 (mm-dd-yyyy)?
Actually, many sites are now using drop-down lists for month, day, and year.
Since we're discussing "standard" information like dates, how do your systems deal with names?
As an introduction to the complexity of the problem, here are two links:
This one is both shorter and more interesting:
https://www.kalzumeus.com/2010/06/17/falsehoods-programmers-believe-about-names/
This one is from a government, therefore longer, but nonethless useful:
https://www.fbiic.gov/public/2008/nov/Naming_practice_guide_UK_2006.pdf
Look up Korean in the second link I posted. You'll find that his observation about personal names doesn't take into account the situation in Korean names.
And when you ask how old a Korean is do you get the Korean age or the other age?Look up Korean in the second link I posted. You'll find that his observation about personal names doesn't take into account the situation in Korean names.
Oh, yes, he said that there are basically about ten family names (I suppose that's better than surname, but I couldn't think of the appropriate word earlier).