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GeneralUnderwater concert Pin
Sander Rossel25-May-16 9:52
professionalSander Rossel25-May-16 9:52 
GeneralRe: Underwater concert Pin
Marc Clifton25-May-16 12:52
mvaMarc Clifton25-May-16 12:52 
GeneralRe: Underwater concert Pin
Sander Rossel25-May-16 20:48
professionalSander Rossel25-May-16 20:48 
GeneralRe: Underwater concert Pin
BillWoodruff26-May-16 1:16
professionalBillWoodruff26-May-16 1:16 
GeneralRe: Underwater concert Pin
Sander Rossel26-May-16 4:50
professionalSander Rossel26-May-16 4:50 
RantOnly American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
Chris Maunder25-May-16 7:59
cofounderChris Maunder25-May-16 7:59 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
W Balboos, GHB25-May-16 8:04
W Balboos, GHB25-May-16 8:04 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
kalberts26-May-16 0:49
kalberts26-May-16 0:49 
W∴ Balboos wrote:
What's the point of either version? They both sort badly.

The same can be said about e.g. (physical) mail addresses. They would sort much better if they started with the planet identification (or, if you want to go further out, the galaxy and solar system identification), then the continent, the country, the town, street, house number, floor, last name, first name.

Same with DNS addresses - domains, email addresses etc.

Before the current internet address structure squeezed out all its competitor, there were addresssing schemes listing elements from major to minor units. At the binary level, i.e. 32 bit IPv4 or 128 bit IPv6 addresses, the biggest unit comes first, but not in the DNS format.

I guess the justification for putting the biggest unit at the end is that it makes it more natural to chop it off. You don't have to identify the galaxy when sending a postcard to your grandma. In most cases, even the country name is not required. If we had turned the order around, interpretation would in many cases be ambiguous: Is "Norway" a Eurpean country, or a US village?

We write arabic numerals with the biggest unit to the left. So does the arabs, even though they read from right to left. The number is the same, but in the reading order, we see the highest digit first, they see the lowest digit first. Which is the most natural?

In many German-related languages, numbers are pronounced smallest unit first, and you can see it in some old English as well: "... Four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie ...", as the children's rhyme goes. Larger numbers are read in a mixed manner ("three hundred, four and twenty").

Natural language is a mess. But fun to study.
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 1:08
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 1:08 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
kalberts26-May-16 1:20
kalberts26-May-16 1:20 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 1:30
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 1:30 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
kalberts26-May-16 1:49
kalberts26-May-16 1:49 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 2:02
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 2:02 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
kalberts26-May-16 3:20
kalberts26-May-16 3:20 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
gervacleto26-May-16 2:18
professionalgervacleto26-May-16 2:18 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 2:46
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 2:46 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
Michael Waters26-May-16 3:53
Michael Waters26-May-16 3:53 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
Steven121826-May-16 6:42
professionalSteven121826-May-16 6:42 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
Michael Waters26-May-16 7:00
Michael Waters26-May-16 7:00 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
Michael Waters26-May-16 7:29
Michael Waters26-May-16 7:29 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
Benito Aramando26-May-16 2:59
Benito Aramando26-May-16 2:59 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 3:14
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 3:14 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
Benito Aramando26-May-16 3:36
Benito Aramando26-May-16 3:36 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 3:50
W Balboos, GHB26-May-16 3:50 
GeneralRe: Only American and Swahili use mm/dd for dates Pin
Benito Aramando26-May-16 4:02
Benito Aramando26-May-16 4:02 

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