okokokoko next time ill put some smiley at the end of my phrase
It will make my post look less serious
But i'm still curious if Jimmy Page has a mp3 play list
Lets get this thread back on track
Putin khuliyo
here we go
If you were asked the date, would you say "January fifteenth, two thousand twelve" or would you say "fifteenth January, two thousand twelve"? I think the first sounds better and thus it then translates into MM/DD/YYYY.
edit: My browser cut off after American "Logic" so I didn't see the Japansese version and I just assumed this was just a ploy to attack American customs. It's not really logic it's just a custom. Same as continuing to use the qwerty keyboard instead of alphabetizing it or switching to the Dvorak.
We say 15th January, so I think the first one sounds better. Just like Penguirrel said, it's a matter of what you're accustomed to.
From a logical point of view, I guess dd-mm-yyyy or yyyy-mm-dd make the most sense because, well you know, large-->small or small-->large and not medium->small->large.
For anything dealing with computers (filenames and such), yyyy-mm-dd wins by far, obviously, automatically placing the names in chronological order.
On a computer it would make most sense to use year/month/day since if you order by date this would work. If you don't put year first, it won't be pretty. I prefer European, but that's what I'm used to. The metric system on the other hand beats the living shit out of the "American" (and some other countries that use it) one.