Hi Tony,
[YYYY-MM-DD]
That's always a good format to have available. I use it a lot for file storage, especially auto generated log files and backups.
It's the most logical format for computers :)
[DD.MM.YYYY]
Hmm, that one always looks a bit weird to me, but I have seen it used. :)
:) It's the date standard in Germany at least.
And using . instead of / makes it clear that this date format can only mean this, because MM.DD.YYYY doesn't exist afaik.
So using:
YYYY-MM-DD
MM/DD/YYYY (why on earth anyone does want this, I don't know *scnr*)
DD.MM.YYYY
it would be clear by the separator symbol which one is used.
Just an idea :)
Anna
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