is this how to write military date 27-Aug-September 4,2017
When you beginning a new month?
LAWANDA M
2017-08-27 05:39:16 UTC
is this how to write military date 27-Aug-September 4,2017 When you beginning a new month?
Five answers:
Your Uncle Dodge!
2017-08-29 07:04:56 UTC
27 Aug - 04 Sep 2017
glmoore24
2017-08-28 00:43:49 UTC
Nope
?
2017-08-27 09:33:22 UTC
NO. The U.S. Military uses TWO different Formats. One for Correspondence and one for Messages.
The United States military normally uses the "dd mmm yyyy" format for correspondence. The common month-day-year format is used when corresponding with civilians.[2][3] The military date notation is similar to the date notation in British English but is read cardinally (e.g. "Nineteen July") rather than ordinally (e.g. "The nineteenth of July").
The Department of State and the Department of Defense timestamp their reports and messages with text date-time groups formatted as DDHHMMZ MMM YY, where DD represents 2-digit day of the month, HHMM is 24-hour "Zulu time" (in UTC), MMM is abbreviated month and YY are the last two digits of the year. For example, 091630Z JUL 11 represents 16:30 UTC on 9 July 2011.[4] The DDHHMMZ format is also used worldwide in aviation meteorology for timestamps in METAR and TAF weather reports (month and year are omitted altogether due to very limited validity of these reports).
Don't Fear The Reaper
2017-08-27 05:44:13 UTC
27/08/2017-04/09/2017. Always day is two digits, moth is two digits and year is 4 digits. The sequence is always (24hr based) time/day/month/year.
anonymous
2017-08-27 05:42:23 UTC
military dates go year, month, day.
2017-09-27
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