• Wolf314159@startrek.website
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    20 hours ago

    This should be always. We could easily have 13 months with an even 28 days, or four weeks, every year. But, you’re going to say, “What about that last day?” That’s new year’s day, it’s once a year, not ever a regular day of the week, and every leap year we get 2 of them and make a weekend of it. Those remainder calendar days don’t need to be a particular day of the week, we can just make them holidays and stop worrying about it. Or we do keep them as regular days of the week and the calendar shifts by a day or two every year. I don’t really care. I just want the months and weeks to be at least a little less chaotic. And if there is going to be a chaotic little remainder weekend every year, it might as well be a party.

    • piwakawakas@lemmy.nz
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      1 day ago

      I always knew starting the week on Sunday was messed up. Thankfully there’s an ISO to back me up

      • far_university1990@reddthat.com
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        1 day ago

        It also say YYYY-mm-dd should be date and HH:MM:SS should be time and YYYY-mm-ddTHH:MM:SS should be datetime. But it also allow extremely cursed datetime, many prefer rfc3339

        • piwakawakas@lemmy.nz
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          21 hours ago

          I use that date format for saving work docs anyway. And use dd/mm/yyyy for anything else.

          Although thinking about it, maybe I should just adopt the international standard for everything

          • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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            1 hour ago

            I routinely do this in emails and documents. No one has ever questioned me on it because they’re used to it from folder/file names.

            Please do join me in slowly changing the world over to year, month, day order.

            (Though I prefer the non-standard dots instead of hyphens, as they are non-line-breaking, and allows for hyphens to be used as separators for other parts in a file along with underscores)

            YYYY.MM.DD is my fave

          • HereIAm@lemmy.world
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            24 hours ago

            The standard specify a ton features and formats. Thing like day if week so 2015-W4-1 would be the first day of the fourth week of 2015.

            But the you have can have periods like “P1Y2M10DT2H30M”, and you can specify start and end dates. So if you want to start an event that runs for 3 months, 20 days, and some time you could write it as “20220212T1133/P3M20DT7H15M”.

            And then there’s more like giving the year as an exponent, so 2015 can be written as Y-2.015E3S4.

    • dan@upvote.au
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      2 days ago

      This. Sunday is part of the weekend, not the weekstart.

      • LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        But there’s no such thing as the word “weekstart.” Weekends are split in half. Saturday is the end of the week and Sunday is the beginning of the week. I am from USA and this has always been my understanding.

        • LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Ah yes, Weekends are like bookends. I like your analogy.

          If these nonces up there can understand that there’s no such thing as a “bookstart,” they can begin to understand the concept of weekends holding the week together from opposite ends.

      • NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone
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        24 hours ago

        On Friday Americans wish each other a good weekend and weekstart, obv (if they even get both off, which sounds unlikely now I’ve said it).

      • azuth@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        Σαββατοκύριακο. Saturday and Sunday. It would be far weirder to start the week on Δευτέρα which literally meaning “second”.

        Of course in English and other languages Monday does not mean second. Still for Mose western (plus Arabs) Monday has been second after Sunday. Long before Saturday was a day off.

        ISO defining the start of the week as Monday due to it being the first business day (lol) has comparatively little impact.

    • i078@europe.pub
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      2 days ago

      Depends, mine starts on Monday. I also live in SI and ISO. My wife’s starts on Sunday, she goes to church. Although I still don’t get that as the seventh day was a rest day.

      It does sometimes make talking about Sunday next week confusing.

      • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        Because sabbath was the seventh day, the rest day. It predates Christianity. It’s like the very first book of the Old Testament…

          • BigAssFan@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Was my understanding as well. Last day of the week is for rest, which Christians do on a Sunday. Funny that a lot of Christian countries still use Sabbath as last day of the week.

        • dan@upvote.au
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          2 days ago

          Practically everyone should know SI, or have at least heard of it before. It’s the standard system of measurement used in most of the world. It includes base units for time (seconds), distance (meters), mass (kilograms), electric current (amps), temperature (Kelvin), amount of a substance (mole) and intensity of light (candela), plus a bunch of units derived from these.

          It’s practically only the USA that doesn’t use some of three units (for example, preferring feet over meters)

          ISO is a standards body. They define a bunch of standards. One of the more well-known ones is ISO 8601, which defines standards for dates and times. It specifies that weeks start on Monday.

          • luierik@lemmy.zip
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            1 day ago

            I’d thought I’d see less people of the USA on Lemmy but it seems I cannot escape them

            • hallettj@leminal.space
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              1 day ago

              There are a lot of us! Especially on English-speaking forums. The US population is close to half of the entire population of Europe.

              But there is a trick to almost completely avoid Americans: frequent a forum in any language other than English.

              • luierik@lemmy.zip
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                1 day ago

                For now, fortunately, it is manageable with the keyword filters to filter out most of US politics, but we’ll see how long that lasts 😃

                • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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                  1 day ago

                  All the different server instances are independently owned and maintained. Lemmy.world for example I believe is located in Germany or Netherlands, which I think is also where a lot of the admin staff are located? Lemmy.zip I think is hosted in the US. Check join-lemmy.org, I think it tells you where all the various instances are located. Or there’s a similar Lemmy stats site that shows it, I don’t recall exactly, which is why I keep saying “I think” as I would need to double check all that info to be sure. But it’s probably pretty close to accurate.

    • ViatorOmnium@piefed.social
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      2 days ago

      It depends on the country. While most countries start it in Monday, Sunday is also common, some muslim countries start it on Saturday, and Maldives starts the week on Fridays.

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I live in a blue area but I never agreed that the week starts with Sunday. It’s clearly Monday and I dgaf who says otherwise.

    • Spice Hoarder@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      Dispite growing up in the US, I never actually considered Sunday as the first day of the week. I just saw Saturday and Sunday as margins to the actual week days.

  • FiskFisk33@startrek.website
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    2 days ago
        february 2026   
    mo tu we th fr sa su
                       1
     2  3  4  5  6  7  8
     9 10 11 12 13 14 15
    16 17 18 19 20 21 22
    23 24 25 26 27 28 
    
  • Ænima@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    My FiL gifted me an art calendar from 1998. I was confused at first, then he said the calendar days of 1998 are the same days for 2026. So, that’s a thing we all know now!

    • groet@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      There exist only 14 different calendars.

      Jan 1= monday, Jan 1 = tuesday, …, Jan 1= sunday, and again the same 7 combinations for leap years.

      There is a difference for hollidays like easter that are based on the moon cycle, but just from the days of the week its only 14.

  • FaeriesWearBoots@sopuli.xyz
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    2 days ago

    This could be every month if we adopted a 13 month calendar of 4, 7 day weeks. Works out very cleanly with only 1 extra day per year.

    • portifornia@piefed.social
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      15 minutes ago

      Agreed. It’s so simple and beautiful.

      • The once a year extra-day is an international Eat The Rich holiday. Probably tied to the winter solstice.
      • And every fourth year we all get a bonus-extra Leap Purge holiday.

      The Gregorian calendar has nothing on this!

      • birdwing@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 day ago

        Combined with Holocene calendar and decimal time… hnrggh… one can dream! I actually designed a spreadsheet for exactly this and it works perfectly. Only issue is that it doesn’t auto-update, you need to edit an empty cell of the spreadsheet (doesn’t even need to be saved), for it to update to the current time.

        Would be nice to have an installation that lets you use that calendar and time format…

    • dan@upvote.au
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      2 days ago

      While we’re changing the calendar, can we rename September through December so they’re not off by two?

      Septem, Octo, Novem and Decem are the Latin words for 7, 8, 9 and 10 respectively, but they’re actually the 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th months of the year. This is because the Roman calendar was originally only 10 months, but Julius Caesar inserted two new months in the middle, without renaming the last four.

      Maybe the oldest tech debt in existence - the calendar was changed in 45 BC.

      • thethunderwolf@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        In Japanese months are named based on the number of the month, literally “first month” to “12th month”, which is the most sensible way to do it

        Why not just call February 2026 “month 2 of 2026” and call the 9th of February 2026 “the 9th of month 2 of 2026”

        • dan@upvote.au
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          15 hours ago

          That’s essentially how the Roman calendar was named for six out of the 10 months:

          • Martius: (Mars)
          • Aprilis: (from aperire, “to open”)
          • Maius: (Maia, goddess)
          • Junius: (Juno, goddess)
          • Quintilis: (Fifth)
          • Sextilis: (Sixth)
          • September: (Seventh)
          • October: (Eighth)
          • November: (Ninth)
          • December: (Tenth)
    • hallettj@leminal.space
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      1 day ago

      I like this better than the French revolutionary calendar’s ten-day weeks. Maybe if they had included more than two weekend days people wouldn’t have hated it so much

      • Malgas@beehaw.org
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        1 day ago

        Worse than that, in order to preserve the date/day-of-week correlation, the extra 1-2 days (you still need leap years) would not have to be part of any week.

        So that’s instant opposition from all the Abrahamic religions.

    • PapaStevesy@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      The best part is that every date (i.e. the 1st, the 22nd, etc) would always fall on the same day of the week, every month.