I’m not sure I would agree with that. ISO-8601 is ambiguous, and very difficult to parse. For example, here are a couple valid ISO-8601 strings. Could you let me know what they mean?
Taken from here. My favorite is the last one (20). If someone just wrote 20 and told you to parse it using ISO-8601, what would you get? Hour? It could even be century (ie. 2023%100)!!
So I would argue that ISO-8601 is just a wee bit too flexible. Personally, I like RFC 3339 just a bit more…
Edit: that said, I would definitely agree that something along the lines of 2021-07-27T14:20:32Z is better than any regularly accepted alternative, and I pretty much format my dates that way all the time.
ISO8601 is the best format and the international standard to denote date and time.
2023-11-21T00:34:2
I’m not sure I would agree with that. ISO-8601 is ambiguous, and very difficult to parse. For example, here are a couple valid ISO-8601 strings. Could you let me know what they mean?
P1DT1H R10/2021-208/P1Y T22.3+0800 22,3 2021-W30-2 2021-W30-2T22+08 P1Y 20
Taken from here. My favorite is the last one (
20
). If someone just wrote20
and told you to parse it using ISO-8601, what would you get? Hour? It could even be century (ie.2023%100
)!!So I would argue that ISO-8601 is just a wee bit too flexible. Personally, I like RFC 3339 just a bit more…
Edit: that said, I would definitely agree that something along the lines of
2021-07-27T14:20:32Z
is better than any regularly accepted alternative, and I pretty much format my dates that way all the time.to be fair, you don’t parse “20” without first passing “%C”
Don’t think my bank will like it if I date forms with that.
Mine doesn’t care. It actually never occurred to me not to.
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How do you decide what the second will be, when you start writing it or when you finish?
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Nope.