Questions and Answers : Windows : What is this model date?
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Send message Joined: 13 Sep 04 Posts: 228 Credit: 354,979 RAC: 0 |
When I open the graphics window (to see where I am in the process), it shows a model date 02/09/1993. Now what does this date mean - have I recently finished a year (Feb 09 1993), or am I going to finish a year soon (02 Sept 1993)? The format I would like to see there is the date format I have specified for Windows and all applications to use (Control Panel | Regional Options). Wouldn\'t that make much more sense for everyone? Thank you :) |
Send message Joined: 5 Sep 04 Posts: 7629 Credit: 24,240,330 RAC: 0 |
The project is English, the models come from the British (UK) Met Office, and so the dates are British format: day / month / year. The dates are not derived from the OS date system. To do so would confuse the issue when physicsts start to use the models. |
Send message Joined: 29 Sep 04 Posts: 2363 Credit: 14,611,758 RAC: 0 |
Personally I think it\'s more logical for any date or time format to go from largest unit to smallest (eg days;hours;minutes;seconds) or from smallest to largest. The CPDN model date format does do this. Cpdn news |
Send message Joined: 13 Sep 04 Posts: 228 Credit: 354,979 RAC: 0 |
The project is English, the models come from the British (UK) Met Office, and so the dates are British format: day / month / year. It is, indeed. My model date now shows 27/02/1996 The dates are not derived from the OS date system. What I mean is to display it in my Windows specified form - in my case I would want to see 1996-02-27. How the dates are kept internally is not my concern. |
Send message Joined: 13 Sep 04 Posts: 228 Credit: 354,979 RAC: 0 |
Personally I think it\'s more logical for any date or time format to go from largest unit to smallest (eg days;hours;minutes;seconds) or from smallest to largest. The CPDN model date format does do this. Exactly; I would very much more like to see 1993-09-02 than the confusing 02/09/1993 (I don\'t mind the dashes or slashes). |
Send message Joined: 9 Jan 07 Posts: 467 Credit: 14,549,176 RAC: 317 |
There is an ISO standard for this (ISO 8601), which any sensible programmer will use internally or - I would suggest - in filenames. Though the fact has escaped many programmers, human beings are not computers, and the \'locale\' formats should be presented to the \'wet-ware\': pwillener should not be expected to parse a British date, any more than I should receive a decimal comma instead of a decimal point on my petrol receipt. For the busy programmer, ISO 8601 is a good substitute for the correct locale, since it follows the largest-to-smallest rule - which will eliminate most ambiguities. BOINC itself is good at this sort of thing. |
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