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If you include time, include the time zone, as follows:10:46 PM PDT
If I'm advertizing local events, I might put a note on the page "All times in Central European Time", or "All times in local time", since even if you're travelling to the event from a different time zone, you would set your watch to local time anyhow.
Be careful with Usability Standards, and bear in mind that the ones quoted above apply to English language websites. Many non-English speaking countries in Europe use the 24-hour clock, so times on a German website (for example) should always be in 24-hour format.
Note that the old GMT (now UTC) is used in Britain only in the Winter, in summer BST (one hour ahead) is used on clocks.
A search on Google (or other major search engine) will find hundreds of places with more info.
For Time Zones, nothing can really beat an indication like -0500 or +0900 for clarity.
> The usability standards recommend the following format:
> July 17, 2002
Hmm, Month-Day-Year, sounds like an American recommendation, Europeans would have recommended Day-Month-Year:
17 July 2002 which does away with the comma.
g1smd, you sure know how to come back with a very convincing reply to all the rebuttals. I like these kinds of threads. Good solid discussions centered around appealing to a global audience.
> Just added the URI and hadn't even had a chance to view in Opera when I saw a problem in Moz. I'm using...
> Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Win98; en-US; rv:1.0.0) Gecko/20020530
Looks like a software release date in the last eight characters of the last line above.
Good catch! I saw that but didn't think too much of it now that I'm a convert.
My WebTrendsLive stats also gives me three date options...
1. MM/DD/YYYY
2. DD/MM/YYYY
3. YYYY/MM/DD
Of course I'm using option #3. ;)
105. Show dates and time for time-sensitive information only, such as news items, live chats, stock quotes, and so forth.
106. Show users the time that content was last updated, not the computer-generated current time.
107. Include the time zone you are using whenever you reference a time.
108. Use standard abbreviations, such as p.m. or P.M.
109. Spell out the month or use month abbreviations not numbers.
Secondly...
Quote: "Hmm, Month-Day-Year, sounds like an American recommendation, Europeans would have recommended Day-Month-Year"
Now, excuse me, but my first reaction to that statement was negative. You will be happy to see that I managed to restrain my response to that negativity.
Instead, I re-reviewed my notes and other standards sites. W3C is the primary recognized standard. Their standard can be found here:
[w3.org...]
Following a link to the ISO-8601 standard on dates and times, one finds the following:
"The international standard date notation is
YYYY-MM-DD
where YYYY is the year in the usual Gregorian calendar, MM is the month of the year between 01 (January) and 12 (December), and DD is the day of the month between 01 and 31."
[cl.cam.ac.uk...]
So, in essence, you and I are Both wrong. And I will yield to the international standard, in the interests of internet usability for all.
I prefer to use whichever format is appropriate for my intended audience. Very occasionally, that might be YYYY-MM-DD, but more usually it will vary. However, I always, always spell the month out in full to avoid ambiguity. When I write in English I use the 12-hour clock, when I write in German I use the 24-hour clock. And so on. For me, it's not about adhering to standards which have been arbitrarily applied, it's about making sure my audiences understand me.
It's not just ISO and W3C supporting YYYY-MM-DD, now the IETF support it:
From the RFC list yesterday. Amongst other things, proposes an ISO 8601 profile for use in future Internet protocols.
A new Request for Comments is now available in online RFC libraries.
RFC 3339
Title: Date and Time on the Internet: Timestamps
Author(s): G. Klyne, C. Newman
Status: Standards Track
Date: July 2002
Mailbox: GK@ACM.ORG, chris.newman@sun.com
Pages: 18
Characters: 35064
Updates/Obsoletes/SeeAlso: None
I-D Tag: draft-ietf-impp-datetime-05.txt
URL: ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc3339.txt
This document defines a date and time format for use in Internet protocols that is a profile of the ISO 8601 standard for representation of dates and times using the Gregorian calendar.
This document is a product of the Instant Messaging and Presence Protocol Working Group of the IETF.
This is now a Proposed Standard Protocol.
This work was originally proposed way back in 1997 and Chris Newman has put a lot of effort into this, with many refinements along the way. Looks like YYYY-MM-DD is here to stay. RFC 3339.
Yes I *KNOW* it is an RFC for *Protocols* but yet another example of high-level adoption.
It really is silly. Technicians use a certain date format for certain things and you draw the conclusion from that that soon we'll all be using this format?
Using that logic, we should all be putting NaCl on our food.