Fair enough, although “January 26” is still American date format, not Australian date format.
Anyway, not trying to cause an argument or anything, just pointing out some tips you might like to pass on to the graphic designer and marketing team.
I’ll see myself out.
Actually we do have an official standard for both short and long date. It’s “day month year”, not “month day”. Short dates are d/m/yyyy, long dates are dd mmm yyyy.
stylemanual.gov.au/…/quick-guide-dates-and-time#%…
prettygorgeous@aussie.zone 1 day ago
Fair enough, although “January 26” is still American date format, not Australian date format.
Anyway, not trying to cause an argument or anything, just pointing out some tips you might like to pass on to the graphic designer and marketing team. I’ll see myself out.
Deceptichum@quokk.au 1 day ago
We have no standard for if we say 26 of Jan or Jan 26th. The only standard we have is for de/mm/yyyy format.
prettygorgeous@aussie.zone 1 day ago
Actually we do have an official standard for both short and long date. It’s “day month year”, not “month day”. Short dates are d/m/yyyy, long dates are dd mmm yyyy. stylemanual.gov.au/…/quick-guide-dates-and-time#%…
Deceptichum@quokk.au 1 day ago
That’s for “Australian Government content”, it’s not the standard for vernacular Australian English.