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#21
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![]() "Stephen Osborn" wrote in message ... Michael Hoffman wrote: k wrote: I use DD MMM which also cannot be misinterpreted. Unless you speak a language where the months have different names. Then you will just be extremely confused. Untrue. Most people who are likely to be in this position (e.g. using the Internet, working for an international company) speak some form of English to some extent and so will have some familiarity with English month names. Also, with no knowledge of the language involved it is inherent that 01xyz is in DDMMM format and so I can try and find out what xyz is in my language. 0102 has no no inherent format. Whereas YYYY MM DD is very easily worked out by people who use any language and the western calender. |
#22
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![]() "Mrs Redboots" wrote in message ... TheOneKEA wrote to uk.transport.london on Mon, 7 Feb 2005: Mrs Redboots wrote: TheOneKEA wrote to uk.transport.london on Mon, 7 Feb 2005: Last I checked, Thameslink doesn't serve Moorgate GN&C, WA does. I think you'll find there were rush hour services until the blockade started. *cough* I said Moorgate _GN&C_ - Greant Northern & City, the underground NR platforms. The subsurface NR platforms were indeed served by Thameslink, but were originally part of the Met. Oh, I see. I have never been there, so wouldn't know. Never been to Moorgate? Obviously you had a deprived childhood? |
#23
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Brimstone wrote to uk.transport.london on Tue, 8 Feb 2005:
"Mrs Redboots" wrote in message ... Oh, I see. I have never been there, so wouldn't know. Never been to Moorgate? Obviously you had a deprived childhood? Definitely - I grew up in the country and "London" was really only Knightsbridge and the area round Harrods..... -- "Mrs Redboots" http://www.amsmyth.demon.co.uk/ Website updated 23 January 2005 with new photos |
#24
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On Tue, 8 Feb 2005, Brimstone wrote:
"Stephen Osborn" wrote in message ... Michael Hoffman wrote: k wrote: I use DD MMM which also cannot be misinterpreted. Unless you speak a language where the months have different names. Then you will just be extremely confused. Untrue. Most people who are likely to be in this position (e.g. using the Internet, working for an international company) speak some form of English to some extent and so will have some familiarity with English month names. Also, with no knowledge of the language involved it is inherent that 01xyz is in DDMMM format and so I can try and find out what xyz is in my language. 0102 has no no inherent format. Whereas YYYY MM DD is very easily worked out by people who use any language and the western calender. It's also an ISO standard, ISO 8601: http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-serv...esandtime.html Therefore, if you do not use it, UN black helicopters will come in the night and take you away. Incidentally, the ISO wants you to separate the elements with dashes and to zero-pad, as in 2005-02-08. tom -- sh(1) was the first MOO |
#25
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On Tue, 8 Feb 2005 13:35:19 +0000 (UTC), "Brimstone"
wrote: Whereas YYYY MM DD is very easily worked out by people who use any language and the western calender. Assuming you include the separators, which I did, and conventionally for that format is the - character. If not, it could mean two things in certain situations, and three in others (depending on the year). 2004-02-01 fairly unambiguously means the 1st February 2004, as the separation is clear, and I've never encountered anyone who used YYYY-DD-MM that I can recall. Neil -- Neil Williams in Milton Keynes, UK When replying please use neil at the above domain 'wensleydale' is a spam trap and is not read. |
#26
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Neil Williams ) gurgled happily, sounding
much like they were saying : I've never encountered anyone who used YYYY-DD-MM that I can recall. I've never come across any non-merkin who insisted on using MM DD YYYY, either. But here we are. |
#27
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On Tue, 08 Feb 2005 11:57:05 +0000, Michael Hoffman
wrote: k wrote: I use DD MMM which also cannot be misinterpreted. Unless you speak a language where the months have different names. Then you will just be extremely confused. I don't. I speak English. Although our company has offices throughout the world the "official" language is English. (As its an American company it would be, after all "everyone speaks English (American) don't they? :-)) |
#28
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In article , k wrote:
On Tue, 08 Feb 2005 11:57:05 +0000, Michael Hoffman wrote: k wrote: I use DD MMM which also cannot be misinterpreted. Unless you speak a language where the months have different names. Then you will just be extremely confused. I don't. I speak English. Although our company has offices throughout the world the "official" language is English. (As its an American company it would be, after all "everyone speaks English (American) don't they? :-)) Well, Ericsson, a Swedish-based and -owned multinational, also uses English as its official language. So I think in practice, in the business world, everyone really *does* speak English. Similarly, I've just accepted a job with a small Stockholm-based company 95% staffed by Swedes and 100% owned by them (if I recall); its official language is also English. Niklas -- "I always wanted to be a mad scientist, but never really got much past the faintly-annoyed alchemist stage." -- Mik |
#29
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![]() "Niklas Karlsson" wrote in message ... In article , k wrote: On Tue, 08 Feb 2005 11:57:05 +0000, Michael Hoffman wrote: k wrote: I use DD MMM which also cannot be misinterpreted. Unless you speak a language where the months have different names. Then you will just be extremely confused. I don't. I speak English. Although our company has offices throughout the world the "official" language is English. (As its an American company it would be, after all "everyone speaks English (American) don't they? :-)) Well, Ericsson, a Swedish-based and -owned multinational, also uses English as its official language. So I think in practice, in the business world, everyone really *does* speak English. Similarly, I've just accepted a job with a small Stockholm-based company 95% staffed by Swedes and 100% owned by them (if I recall); its official language is also English. But which version of English? Americans claim to speak Englsih, but insist on deviating from the original. |
#30
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In message , at 08:58:14 on Wed, 9
Feb 2005, Brimstone remarked: But which version of English? Americans claim to speak Englsih, but insist on deviating from the original. Oddly enough, it's British English which has deviated from the original, while American English has stagnated. -- Roland Perry |
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