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Admin
So you can get MREs on Amazon? Of course!
Admin
With the F1 site I suspect the validation issue only occurs for some of the visitors depending on their OS's locale's date format. One of the validations uses the the users' date format, a different validation (or the control or something) is using a hard coded date format which doesn't automatically change depending on the users' locale.
Admin
If
1 = 2
, that explains a lot about this plane of reality.Admin
A belated slainte'chaim to you too Lyle!
Admin
Yeah, that's super clever.
Admin
I'm not sure why anyone thinks the last one is a WTF. You have an upper brand (Ricola) which is 24-per-packet, and you have an "other" brand, called "365"(1), which is 30-per-packet. OK, it's a bit goofy to have a number as your brand, but what exactly is the vendor site supposed to do in such a case?
(1) Full name "365 by Whole Foods", naturally.
Addendum 2022-03-18 08:42: I call Ricola an upper brand solely because of the prices, of course.
Admin
The late Mrs Cynic was formerly (long before I met her) a teletype maintenance technician in the USAF, and she had exactly nothing good to say about MREs...
Admin
You're misunderstanding the issue -- the problem is that the header says "1 results" when it should say "2 results"
Admin
Oh, no, my mistake; I missed that Steve was making a joke.
Admin
I'm aware that Thursday was St Patrick's day (although as a Englishman, it's not a particularly significant day), but what else was it?
Admin
Purim and St. Pat's intersected this year for the first time in ~70 years. There's even a song about it, though I'm not sure if I should recommend it. It's arguably funnier than this column. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MF4GOKqBRVQ
Admin
Haha, the date one is funny, because in the textbox you have the Italian date while the red text is the American one. mm/dd/yyyy is really weird, because it's not most significant to least significant or the other way around, it's kind completely random. No idea who came up with this format, does anyone know how it came to be?
Admin
Americans: Not Invented Here.
Admin
Are you sure? I have no idea what Steve's joke is, or what the post is even supposed to mean, unless he missed the joke.
Admin
My best guess is that at some point the year wasn't super important, and most things number related go largest to smallest (like, well, all numbers ever), so dates were typically "May 7th", for example. Then someone realized, hey, sometimes the year is important, so they just stuck it at the end.
That, or the American colonies changed the order specifically to be different from Britain. That's what they did with word spellings, after all.
Admin
I think it came from writing of "January 1, 2022", then "Jan 1, 22", then "1/1/22". But I might be wrong.
Admin
Hmm, that could be. We write 1. Jänner 2022 (1st (of) January 2022) here. So least significant one first, like in Italy.
Admin
Rule 6: There is NOOOOOO... rule 6.
Admin
Indeed. Oops.
You missed that because I wasn't making a joke. I missed the actual point. My mistake.
Admin
ISO 8601, or if you really insist, ISO 8601LE, are the only date formats that make sense.
Admin
In our reality, for huge amounts of 1, 1 = 2, for small amounts of 2, because if 1 gets a lot bigger, it's almost as big as a bit of 2.
Admin
I am still wondering which famous Holidays have actually collided back then. I guess the first one was St. Patrick but what was the second one?
Admin
Oh! What's ISO 8601LE?
I really like ISO 8601 for dates and times, but it's wrong about weekdays (it starts the week on Monday, which is objectively incorrect), so if there's a version that leaves that part out I'll be on top of the world.
Admin
@jkshapiro: You ask what's ISO 8601LE? Obviously it's ISO8601 Little-Endian.
So it starts with the time zone on the left and ends with the year on the right. So as of when / where I'm typing the correct format of
Now()
is any of the following:Unless processed on an actually big-endian machine in which case it changes to any of:
Admin
I'd just like to say that as an American who also writes code, I'd love for us to go to YYYY-MM-DD for the sole reason that even if those dates are stored as text, you can sort them (assuming months and days are padded so they're always 2 digits). You can't do that with MM-DD-YYYY or DD-MM-YYYY, at least not without inverting the string, first. YYYY-MM-DD also seems like the least ambiguous, as nobody anywhere writes their dates as YYYY-DD-MM. Just my 0.02
Admin
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