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Happy Pi Day
... for those of you who are trigonometrically inclined.
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Re: Happy Pi Day
.... And if you are that side of the Pond. This side, it's the fourteenth of March (14.3) rather than March the fourteenth. We still use your version for circles, though.
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The daughter of my wife's friend just won a school contest for memorizing and reciting Pi to 300 digits. Kids these days...
Jeff |
Re: Happy Pi Day
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When you think about it, you folks in the old country never get to have Pi day, since there is no 14th month. Which just leaves more Pi for us. (To compensate, you can keep the tea.) The date format I prefer, because it's most logical (and works best for computer sorting) is 2016.03.14. I know darned well the US will never adopt that, since metric never caught on here. :-( |
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Re: Happy Pi Day
Thanks for that info, Steve. You learn something new every day, they say!
Being inquisitive, I Googled it - and found that there's actually an online converter at Online Conversion - Julian Date Converter (there would just have to be, I suppose) .... but it gives me today as 2457464.25. I never was any good at maths, though. |
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Dave |
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I develop apps, web pages, and databases for a large, high-tech, international corporation.
In order to avoid all the different date format ambiguities, I made my own non-ambiguous format. Today is 18-Mar-2016 At least that works around the planet wherever English is perceived. |
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Another option I've seen (rarely) is "19-III-2016" with a roman numeral used to designate the month. But at the beginning of a month, "3-IV-2016" would still be ambiguous if you didn't know the "standard." At least Richard's style is unambiguous, even for a non-English speaker, because the 31 days don't have 31 unique names. Personally, I think we should have 13 months of 28 days each, and one extra day in the new month (whatever it is). And we'd still need leap years. While we're at it, move Saturday and Sunday to the 6th and 7th day of the week (the way they are now on Russian calendars). |
Re: Happy Pi Day
Or we could use a system like Japan where the official year is 平成二十八年 or the 28th year of the Heisei era. And it will start counting from 1 again when the next emperor assumes the throne and chooses a name for the era. So they get to re-issue the coins and change the freshness dates, etc.
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