Re: [NSDate +dateWithNaturalLanguageString] question
Re: [NSDate +dateWithNaturalLanguageString] question
- Subject: Re: [NSDate +dateWithNaturalLanguageString] question
- From: Phil <email@hidden>
- Date: Sun, 13 Jul 2008 16:41:16 -0400
On Jul 13, 2008, at 2:50 PM, Jens Alfke wrote:
On 13 Jul '08, at 10:52 AM, Phil wrote:
I'd really like to understand what *common* modern uses there are
for non-Gregorian calendars
Are you serious? A large fraction of the world's population uses
other calendars. From the Wikipedia entry "Calendar":
Apparently ignorant, but quite serious.
While the Gregorian calendar is widely used in Israel's business
and day-to-day affairs, the Hebrew calendar, used by Jews worldwide
for religious and cultural affairs, also influences civil matters
in Israel (such as national holidays) and can be used there for
business dealings (such as for the dating of checks).
The Persian calendar is used in Iran and Afghanistan. The Islamic
calendar is used by most non-Persian Muslims worldwide. The
Chinese,Hebrew, Hindu, and Julian calendars are widely used for
religious and/or social purposes. The Ethiopian calendar or
Ethiopic calendar is the principal calendar used in Ethiopia and
Eritrea. In Thailand, where the Thai solar calendar is used, the
months and days have adopted the western standard, although the
years are still based on the traditional Buddhist calendar.
Even where there is a commonly used calendar such as the Gregorian
calendar, alternate calendars may also be used, such as a fiscal
calendar or the astronomical year numbering system[1].
Add that up and it's probably over 75% of the world's population
using other calendars, at least for non-business purposes.
So I'm just be trapped in my own perspective/needs on this (i.e. when
I read the 'business and day-to-day affairs' comment on the Hebrew
calendar I think 'that's well over 90% of the use cases I can think of
using the Gregorian calendar.') OK, I'll quit complaining and quietly
(re)implement what I need for my purposes.
Hardcoding the Gregorian calendar is a serious internationalization
problem, just like hardcoding the Roman alphabet or left-to-right
text layout or octagonal red stop-sign icons.
—Jens
I appreciate you taking the time to explain that this really is an
issue for some folks as I didn't appreciate it as being as important
as it apparently is.
Thanks,
Phil_______________________________________________
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