Dates
-
I've driven on the right once, when I was last over't pond. Very strange! However, it was an automatic (which I'd also never driven before) so it wasn't really a problem. The biggest difference was going from driving (my now long gone) Saxo, to a Dodge Caravan :laugh:
He who makes a beast out of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man. Current Weight: 16st. 2lbs 10/10/2009 Target Weight : 14st. Weight lost : 0lbs
Hmm, that reminds me I wonder how ICMC (a mountaineering club I'm part of) are going to fare this weekend. They've been given a long-wheel base Land Rover for the weekend (they just pay the fuel) and the four drivers listed comprise of:
- Someone who's only been driving a year and only Saxo sized vehicles
- Someone else who's only been driving a Saxo since she passed her test
- Someone who's only ever driving a Micra
And I'm hazarding a guess that based on the description of the seating arrangement (2+2+4 sideways in the back) it's going to be a 130 which is longer than the normal "long-wheel-base" Defenders. In fact none of them have even driven a diesel. Oh well, if they'd been a bit more on the ball then I'd have been available and could have driven it, considering I'm used to vehicles of that size and have driven at least once all possibilities of that type of LR. I almost wish I was going just to see how they cope with the driving...
I doubt it. If it isn't intuitive then we need to fix it. - Chris Maunder
-
Abu Mami wrote:
5' 10"
I always thought he's more like 1.5 yards.
-
Hmm, that reminds me I wonder how ICMC (a mountaineering club I'm part of) are going to fare this weekend. They've been given a long-wheel base Land Rover for the weekend (they just pay the fuel) and the four drivers listed comprise of:
- Someone who's only been driving a year and only Saxo sized vehicles
- Someone else who's only been driving a Saxo since she passed her test
- Someone who's only ever driving a Micra
And I'm hazarding a guess that based on the description of the seating arrangement (2+2+4 sideways in the back) it's going to be a 130 which is longer than the normal "long-wheel-base" Defenders. In fact none of them have even driven a diesel. Oh well, if they'd been a bit more on the ball then I'd have been available and could have driven it, considering I'm used to vehicles of that size and have driven at least once all possibilities of that type of LR. I almost wish I was going just to see how they cope with the driving...
I doubt it. If it isn't intuitive then we need to fix it. - Chris Maunder
-
Or half a Quart! Or four Gills. Really, people should be intelligent enough to work out unit measurements.
CCC solved so far: 2 (including a Hard One!)
-
So today is 20th of October 2009. In UK format that is 20/10/2009. Kinda makes sense right, smallest to biggest. Logical. In US format it's 10/20/2009. Now to me that's totally illogical. Why would you do that. Can any Americans explain to me why this makes sense. (lets try to forget about patriotism). I don't understand why it would ever be useful to break the logical order. It's like writing the time in HH:SS:MM. [As a developer I obviously recognise that the superior format is neither of the above but is in fact YYYY-MM-DD as it maintains correct sort order and digit significance]
Simon
I agree with the yyyy-mm-dd as most of the time sort order is a pain and with Microsoft helping it really gets interesting. With the year first it would make life easier
-
I was hoping you would say something like 5' 11" so that I could reply with a bit of scorn at your sticking with metrics, but you confounded me! :)
------------------------------------ To eat well in England, you should have a breakfast three times a day. W. Somerset Maugham 1925
Dalek Dave wrote:
so that I could reply with a bit of scorn
I suspected as much :laugh: I do genuinely use metrics for height and weight. I'm 80kg, but for some reason I have no idea how tall I am, I'd guess around 1.8m. Probably because we have scales in the bathroom, so I step on them every now and again, but we don't have a tape measure hung on the wall.
Simon
-
Simon Stevens wrote:
[As a developer I obviously recognise that the superior format is neither of the above but is in fact YYYY-MM-DD as it maintains correct sort order and digit significance]
Arabic developers might see that differently...
Interesting. I assume you are referring to the right-to-left writing of their language. I would expect a format entered in as yyyy-mm-dd would appear as "dd-mm-yyyy" in the RTL environment, and I would expect the sorting algorithm to adhere to the RTL option when considering digit significance, so I would expect it still to work correctly. Obviously I have no real idea what I am talking about so please ignore me.
Simon
-
So today is 20th of October 2009. In UK format that is 20/10/2009. Kinda makes sense right, smallest to biggest. Logical. In US format it's 10/20/2009. Now to me that's totally illogical. Why would you do that. Can any Americans explain to me why this makes sense. (lets try to forget about patriotism). I don't understand why it would ever be useful to break the logical order. It's like writing the time in HH:SS:MM. [As a developer I obviously recognise that the superior format is neither of the above but is in fact YYYY-MM-DD as it maintains correct sort order and digit significance]
Simon
If memory serves the US Navy uses dd-mm-yyyy (I will happily sit corrected).
-
Interesting. I assume you are referring to the right-to-left writing of their language. I would expect a format entered in as yyyy-mm-dd would appear as "dd-mm-yyyy" in the RTL environment, and I would expect the sorting algorithm to adhere to the RTL option when considering digit significance, so I would expect it still to work correctly. Obviously I have no real idea what I am talking about so please ignore me.
Simon
Simon Stevens wrote:
Obviously I have no real idea what I am talking about so please ignore me.
I don't know much about RTL either. It just occurred to me that there may be implications with the date format. Too lazy to google now...
-
Ed.Poore wrote:
I almost wish I was going just to see how they cope with the driving...
And just slip in on Sunday evening, "Oh me? Yeah I have experience driving vehicles like this. Why? did you want me to drive?"
- Rob
They know I have the experience, in fact they've asked for advice on how to drive it. The way things work is a first-come first-served basis. I was meant to be running a shoot back at home that weekend but there were so many applying for the trip they asked if I was free. I said I could make myself free if absolutely required (thus driving either the minibuses or the LR). So was added to the list, then they decided to cap the number of people going so they had others who'd replied first who "could" drive the LR so I went back to my original plan of hosting the shoot. Then they say yesterday that I'm on the trip and could I help with the LR. Tough luck mates. I'll stick with my 25 year old LR this weekend, better not change the plans yet again...
I doubt it. If it isn't intuitive then we need to fix it. - Chris Maunder
-
So today is 20th of October 2009. In UK format that is 20/10/2009. Kinda makes sense right, smallest to biggest. Logical. In US format it's 10/20/2009. Now to me that's totally illogical. Why would you do that. Can any Americans explain to me why this makes sense. (lets try to forget about patriotism). I don't understand why it would ever be useful to break the logical order. It's like writing the time in HH:SS:MM. [As a developer I obviously recognise that the superior format is neither of the above but is in fact YYYY-MM-DD as it maintains correct sort order and digit significance]
Simon
You should try living in Canada where officially it's dd/mm/yy, but practically, because of that country next door, it's sometimes mm/dd/yy. Yet the locals never get confused! I, on the other hand, have no idea. None. And don't get me started about their "Best Before" dates on food. They only use 2 letters for months, so you can have 11JU09. Is that June or July? Are you feeling lucky, punk?
cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP
-
So today is 20th of October 2009. In UK format that is 20/10/2009. Kinda makes sense right, smallest to biggest. Logical. In US format it's 10/20/2009. Now to me that's totally illogical. Why would you do that. Can any Americans explain to me why this makes sense. (lets try to forget about patriotism). I don't understand why it would ever be useful to break the logical order. It's like writing the time in HH:SS:MM. [As a developer I obviously recognise that the superior format is neither of the above but is in fact YYYY-MM-DD as it maintains correct sort order and digit significance]
Simon
Simon, In the UK, for speed limits you still use mph, right? Or have you changed to kmph now?
Regards, Nish
Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET (my blog)
My latest book : C++/CLI in Action / Amazon.com link -
You should try living in Canada where officially it's dd/mm/yy, but practically, because of that country next door, it's sometimes mm/dd/yy. Yet the locals never get confused! I, on the other hand, have no idea. None. And don't get me started about their "Best Before" dates on food. They only use 2 letters for months, so you can have 11JU09. Is that June or July? Are you feeling lucky, punk?
cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP
Chris Maunder wrote:
They only use 2 letters for months, so you can have 11JU09
That's incredible.
-
Only if you have a very small head! I have only previously heard of a 10 Gallon Hat.
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
-
Interesting. I assume you are referring to the right-to-left writing of their language. I would expect a format entered in as yyyy-mm-dd would appear as "dd-mm-yyyy" in the RTL environment, and I would expect the sorting algorithm to adhere to the RTL option when considering digit significance, so I would expect it still to work correctly. Obviously I have no real idea what I am talking about so please ignore me.
Simon
I speak a little Arabic. Numbers in Arabic are written like ours left-to-right , even when "Arabic arabic" numerals are used and all the other writing is left to right. The effect when you read it inline is weird as you have to reverse direction whilst reading, like this: The value of PI 395141.3 to six decimal places.
CCC solved so far: 2 (including a Hard One!)
-
Simon, In the UK, for speed limits you still use mph, right? Or have you changed to kmph now?
Regards, Nish
Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET (my blog)
My latest book : C++/CLI in Action / Amazon.com link -
Nishant Sivakumar wrote:
In the UK, for speed limits you still use mph
MPH obviously, why would we want to use some foreign measurement that nobody understands? ;)
Richard MacCutchan wrote:
MPH obviously, why would we want to use some foreign measurement that nobody understands?
:-) Wouldn't this same thought process apply to mm-dd-yyyy too? Everyone here understands it, so why change it!
Regards, Nish
Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET (my blog)
My latest book : C++/CLI in Action / Amazon.com link -
So today is 20th of October 2009. In UK format that is 20/10/2009. Kinda makes sense right, smallest to biggest. Logical. In US format it's 10/20/2009. Now to me that's totally illogical. Why would you do that. Can any Americans explain to me why this makes sense. (lets try to forget about patriotism). I don't understand why it would ever be useful to break the logical order. It's like writing the time in HH:SS:MM. [As a developer I obviously recognise that the superior format is neither of the above but is in fact YYYY-MM-DD as it maintains correct sort order and digit significance]
Simon
-
Richard MacCutchan wrote:
MPH obviously, why would we want to use some foreign measurement that nobody understands?
:-) Wouldn't this same thought process apply to mm-dd-yyyy too? Everyone here understands it, so why change it!
Regards, Nish
Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET (my blog)
My latest book : C++/CLI in Action / Amazon.com link -
If memory serves the US Navy uses dd-mm-yyyy (I will happily sit corrected).
The one navy format I'm familiar with makes all the other formats we've been arguing about seem brilliant. DDHHMMZ MMM YY which turns this 7/5/2005 9:20:22 AM into this 050920Z JUL 05 :omg: :wtf: crappy cite but I don't feel like finding a nicer one.[^]
The latest nation. Procrastination.