Natural numbers work backwards, units are in order from big to small. That also does not store well on databases or Excel. You can’t sort it as text. YYYY-MM-DD-hh-mm
Or the DB2 date (only) format which is 7 characters: CYYMMDD
C = 1 if year is greater than 1999 as a “fix” for Y2K problems.
1250902 is today’s date.
250902 was exactly 100 years ago.
Natural numbers work backwards, units are in order from big to small. That also does not store well on databases or Excel. You can’t sort it as text. YYYY-MM-DD-hh-mm
Actually, the date and time format is: yyyy-MM-dd-HH-mm. Always 12 characters, can be sorted as text or long (if the - is removed).
As long as it’s easy to manipulate at the back end. IBM DB2 date/time format uses 25 characters, and includes 6 decimal places for the seconds.
Or the DB2 date (only) format which is 7 characters: CYYMMDD
C = 1 if year is greater than 1999 as a “fix” for Y2K problems. 1250902 is today’s date. 250902 was exactly 100 years ago.
Yeah, that’s what I’m dealing with these days…sigh. It won’t be a problem for a while. Hopefully the AI of the future is trained for the edge case.
Here’s atip that might help: Add 19,000,000 to any CYYMMDD date to convert it into YYYYMMDD
I will flex this knowledge at work. Thanks.