• undetermined@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I understand going from biggest to smallest or smallest to biggest, both make sense to me.

    But there’s also “12/11/2023” which is month, then day, then year. That one doesn’t make sense to me but seems to have it’s use in America.

    • Stovetop@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I prefer YYYY MM DD myself, and I am assuming that the US operates along weird similar logic but just considers the year irrelevant for most dates, tacking it on at the end instead when the year needs to be mentioned so that the unstated/assumed dates which omit the year still begin the same way.

      • psycotica0@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        I think that’s too much thinking, I’m pretty sure it’s simpler than that. North Americans say “December Twelfth” or “May Forth” or “March Fourteenth” rather than “The Fourteenth of March”.

        So they go “March -> 3”, “Fourteenth -> 14”, and you get “3/14” that you can read from left to right as “March Fourteenth”. That’s about it, I’m pretty sure.

        And so long as everyone agrees which one comes first it’s not ambiguous. Of course, everyone doesn’t agree, and there are logical reasons to pick the others, but this one is simply in reading order.