dd mm yyyy is the date (day month year).
Most countries use DD/MM/YY or DD/MM/YYYY formats.The US chooses to use MM/DD/YY or MM/DD/YYYY.
"dd mm yyy" is an incomplete date format. It seems to be missing the actual numbers for the day, month, and year. Typically, it should be written as "dd/mm/yyyy" or "dd-mm-yyyy" to represent the actual date.
Yes. DD = Day MM = Month YYYY = Year. MM/DD/YYY Ex. 06/04/ 1996
Depends on the locale. In Denmark it is: DD-MM-YYYY Like: 15-01-2008 Or: DD. MMMM YYYY Like: 15. January 2008 -------------- Just noticed it was in databases: MySQL use: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS
It comes at the end--US: mm/dd/yyyy, everywhere else: dd/mm/yyyy
In dd/mm/yyyy format, it is XXVIII - V - MCMLXXXVI In mm/dd/yyyy format, it is V - XXVIII - MCMLXXXVI
the only abbreviation I have ever seen for days is the letter d, as in date of birth format, e.g. dd/mm/yyyy or mm/dd/yyyy
If you're in America: MM/DD/YYYY If you're in other countries(except some): DD/MM/YYYY Good luck :)
I-VII-MMXI or VII-1-MMXI depending on which date format you use (DD-MM-YYYY or MM-DD-YYYY)
VI/V/MMVI (MM/DD/YYYY) or as people in England write V/VI/MMVI (DD/MM/YYYY)
number of birth month-day of birth-year of birth. your welcome.