Dd/mm/yyyy

>dd/mm/yyyy

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Why?
Is it harder to understand?

>>dd/mm/yyyy
>>yyyy/mm/dd
>>mm/dd/yyyy

only one of these isn't sortable as string (e.g. filenames, string database fields containing the timestamp, etc.)

your move ameridumbdumbs

yyyy/mm/dd is what I always use because my company uses it

I think it's the most sensible

Westerners read from left to right. Having the number that changes most frequently furthest to the left makes the most sense.

how do you say it in real life though?

in swedish it's always
>dd/mm/yyyy

>den tjugotredje april
>den 23:e april

flipping day and month makes for a grammatically incorrect sentence

Lmao gook

No, we just do business with Europe often and instead of trying to decide which format to use, all our branches just use that one.

It's the clean way of avoiding an arbitrary pissing contest.

>how do you say it in real life though?

The 4th of July. That's how you say it. Dumbfuck.