On 25-07-12 10:40, anne-ology wrote:
The ISO is not U.S.; the U.S. uses the confusing month-day-year rather than the European day-month-year; as an historian-genealogist, I've been pushing the European method. This ISO is as strange as changing the time twice/year or using AM or PM following 12: ... see http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/iso8601.html for an explanation of this idea; [it's 'clear as mud' ;-) ]
Thanks for your support! Joep
On Mon, Jul 23, 2012 at 4:18 PM, Joep L. Blom <jlblom@neuroweave.nl> wrote: On 23-07-12 21:02, Andreas Säger wrote:Am 23.07.2012 14:44, Guy Voets wrote:Hi folks, A LibO spreadsheet, made in LibO, Dutch version (no Excel or OOo past). - In LibO 3.5.5, I used to give in dates as 20-7 and they were shown as 20 Jul 12. - In LibO 3.6.0.2, if I enter 20-7, 20-7 is shown in the cell. If I enter 20-7-12, the date is inverted into 12 Jul 2020. So instead of entering 20-7, I now need to enter 12-7-20 to get the desired notation 20 Jul 12. Is this a new feature, or a bug?This is just another anti-feature that has been added to Calc against all reason simply because too many inexperienced users who never really used any spreadsheets insisted loudly enough. I will upgrade my LibreOffice 3.5 to ApacheOpenOffice 3.4.1. I resent the US way of ISO 8601. We Dutch and other Europeans use themore logical sequence of day-month-year instead of the illogical year-month-day.(most important first, least important last: very often the year can be missed). Joep
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