Perfect date
Perfect date
/ instead of colons .
But wouldn’t that just be an extension of the way of doing things, though? If I’m used to writing “July 4th, 1776”, I wouldn’t start writing “04/07/1776” when that format picked up (which, as I understand things, didn’t really become a widespread norm until computers).
Unless I’m misunderstanding you, of course (always possible).
I think written abbreviated it was always eg. 4 Jul 1776, 4.7.1776 in Europe (UK/France/Germany)
I’m not sure that’s quite true; here’s an example from King George III doing it the way America does it now (top right corner of the top page):
And an example from America in the same century (though I think we’re already in agreement, there):
Standard in Australia. And common in the UK (it’s traditionally a dot, but slash is more common now).
But I’m team ISO-8601 when there’s a chance of an international audience. At least where locale information can’t be used.