Ah, the real reason that East Asia is the tech hub of the world!1
2 makes the most sense, and its also the international standard for dates in ISO 8601 / RFC 3339
I’m in the US. 90% of devs I work with write it in ISO 8601 anyways, even in emails or chats. Not only does it make sense, it also sorts logically and is more searchable (eg 2024-11-*).
We have
:non-iso-8601:
as a slack emoji to add when people use caveman date formats.Granted we’re an international company across Europe and Americas, and have certainly run into confusion with messages like “the license expires on 4/7/25”
I identify as an RFC 3339.
yup, and also good for sorting
YYYY/MM/DD is best because then you can follow it with HH:MM:SS and everything is in order.
They can’t change it though, or I’ll be robbed of my twice daily “never forget” joke opportunity