Laurreth Posted April 26, 2012 Share Posted April 26, 2012 This was originally intended as a reply to the tauntaun/30 day "have I got it yet?" thread, but IMO the topic warrants its own thread. On the varions account pages related to subscriptions, you're using many different ambiguous date formats: The subscription page at https://account.swtor.com/user/subscription seems to use "MM.DD.YYYY" for the next billing date, and "MM/YYYY" for the credit card expiration. The payment history page uses "DD <shortened month> YYYY" for the next billing date, and "YYYY/MM/DD" for the payment history table. Only one of those formats is not ambiguous. Either consequently make it "MM/DD/YYYY", which at least some people can make sense of given that while Bioware is Canadian, most people will associate it with a US date, or–and that's the proper way–use the unambiguous ISO 8601 notation (YYYY-MM-DD) which is standardised all over the world. You're dealing with payment data there, so being unambiguous trumps localisation. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ellif Posted April 26, 2012 Share Posted April 26, 2012 On the varions account pages related to subscriptions, you're using many different ambiguous date formats: The subscription page at https://account.swtor.com/user/subscription seems to use "MM.DD.YYYY" for the next billing date, and "MM/YYYY" for the credit card expiration. The payment history page uses "DD <shortened month> YYYY" for the next billing date, and "YYYY/MM/DD" for the payment history table. Only one of those formats is not ambiguous. Either consequently make it "MM/DD/YYYY", which at least some people can make sense of given that while Bioware is Canadian, most people will associate it with a US date, or–and that's the proper way–use the unambiguous ISO 8601 notation (YYYY-MM-DD) which is standardised all over the world. You're dealing with payment data there, so being unambiguous trumps localisation. I haven't really seen the "iso 8601" format used much, and didn't know it was a stndardised format. If so it's one that isn't used much. Personally I'd prefer it if they stick to the unambiguous DD <shortened month> YYYY format. It can't be misunderstood (well easily...). The credit card expiration date doesn't seem ambigious however. That's how the dates are written on the cards and it's fairly clear what it stands for so I don't think it needs changing. Best keep it the format on the cards/payment system to avoid confusion. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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