I have added a page to my website with details of using ISO 8601 http://www.ukastro.com/ISO8601.html also is details of a small freeware program i use to put...
... of TClockEx. [2004-07-04] I have used TClockEx for several years. I asked the author about possibly making the ISO format the default when first used. He...
... setup ... of ... http://dmoz.org/Science/Reference/Standards/Individual_Standards/ISO_8 601/ ... Ian, Thanks for that link. I have added it to my webpage. ...
ian, really dnt have an idea how to communicate in an ISO group.. im just a member.... will u teach me how to..... it will be highly appreciated..... thanks so...
No activity on this site, therefore something to talk about. The ISO 3166 country code 1. Gives the universal time offset for most of the world. State codes...
hjwoudenberg@...
Jul 15, 2004 4:33 pm
914
Hi, 1) ISO 639-1 defines language codes, not "UNICODE". 2) The set of ISO code pages does not cover all of the languages of the world... (no japan, china,...
In a message dated 7/17/2004 12:02:24 AM Central Daylight Time, PIEBALDconsult@... writes: But all that other crap is not relevant to ISO8601. Is this...
hjwoudenberg@...
Jul 17, 2004 5:33 am
918
There are other groups that talk about these encodings. tex HJ writes in response: Not important, would be nice to have a single source. ========== Try...
Hi - as many of you may be aware the Australia-USA Free Trade Agreement [Aus-USA-FTA] has been passed by the USA House of Representatives and Senate and just...
Stephen GOULD
sggould@...
Jul 20, 2004 2:38 pm
920
... [2004-07-20] I fail to understand why, in a document encouraging the use of ISO 8601 format dates, every date in that document is NOT in the ISO 8601 ...
Some questions about the interpretation of time-intervals: 1. Does 2004-01-01/2004-01-10 include January 10, or does it end at 2004-01-10T00:00? 2. Is...
Good questions. I don't think they are explicitly answered in the standard. Now, can an answer be pieced together? I think so, but there is room for debate. I...
I believe number 1 should be a mutual agreement thing, as no end time is specified. For number 2, the latter (2004-01-01/P10D = 2004-01-01/2004-01-11) sounds...
Indeed, it's always up to mutual agreement. But my opinion on (1) is that an incomplete timepoint has zeroes for the truncated values (that's defined in the...
I would have to argue that is contrary to common usage and would confuse people. Consider a two day conference, described in text as January 10-11. An ISO...
Remember, these format are essentially for computers to understand, not people, "commom usage" doesn't apply. The formats are humanly readable simply so they...
I believe that the definitions in 3.3 and 3.7 taken together say that. A calenday is an interval starting at 0000, ending at 2400, and a date is a means of...
That makes sense. I usualy use a modified form of ISO 8601 for presenting to people when I wish to use numeric dates. It usually would look like this: ...
No, they just define what a date (either calendar or ordinal) is. Without saying what one means or how to use it. But also look at 3.17 and 3.26 -- 3.26...
I am largely in agreement with all of that. Certainly the specifics of a mutual agreement trump an argument over what is most logical. In the absence of a...
Hi, FWIW, I agree with John. 1) The standard refers to dates with reduced representation as being a specific day month, year or century. Therefore it doesn't...
... at ... them.) ... exist? ... Tim and All We use ISO 8601 notation in an XML specification we are developing as a broadcast application and specify the...
If you are using date-time in XML, consider the xml schema spec and esp.: http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/#isoformats and subsequent section on adding...
searching Google for conection between ISO8601 and education - There is no apparent acceptance yet. So, I wrote my daughter's teacher the following note. ...
That is a nice letter. However, it's actually MM/DD/YYYY that's used in only a few places in the world (off the top of my head, they are: USA, Canada (in words...