Hi Sérgio,
On Thursday, 2012-01-12 16:56:16 +, Sérgio Marques wrote:
> for pt_PT You can put D/M and D-M.
Sure about D/M ? pt_PT locale data does not define any date format using
the '/' separator.
> But I do have one question and one
> observation.
>
> Question - Does year gets added auto
2012/1/13 Eike Rathke
> Hi Sérgio,
>
> On Thursday, 2012-01-12 16:56:16 +, Sérgio Marques wrote:
>
> > for pt_PT You can put D/M and D-M.
>
> Sure about D/M ? pt_PT locale data does not define any date format using
> the '/' separator.
>
>
You are correct. This should only be D-M
That only d
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Hi
pt-BR uses a lot D/M
Thanks
Olivier
Em 13-01-2012 16:01, Sérgio Marques escreveu:
> 2012/1/13 Eike Rathke
>
>> Hi Sérgio,
>>
>> On Thursday, 2012-01-12 16:56:16 +, Sérgio Marques wrote:
>>
>>> for pt_PT You can put D/M and D-M.
>>
>> Sure
Hi Valter,
On Thursday, 2012-01-12 23:59:39 +0100, Valter Mura wrote:
> Sorry
>
> D.M. (D.M.Y)
>
> > I'd say also M.D (M.D.Y) for Italian
it-IT doesn't use '.' as date separator.
Eike
--
LibreOffice Calc developer. Number formatter stricken i18n transpositionizer.
GnuPG key 0x293C05FD : 9
Hi Martin,
On Thursday, 2012-01-12 19:04:23 +0100, Martin Srebotnjak wrote:
> for Slovenian please also add "M.D." (without year and spaces) and "M.
> D." (without year) as well to the acceptance patterns.
In master
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/libreoffice/core/commit/?id=0861854fe7a687d98abb9dac
Hi Sérgio,
On Friday, 2012-01-13 18:01:47 +, Sérgio Marques wrote:
> You are correct. This should only be D-M
In master
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/libreoffice/core/commit/?id=c5fddb08424c54300b26fc3af19acbbfe84f9fd2
> That only depends on the default medium format for date, which is
> > DD
Hi Olivier,
On Friday, 2012-01-13 16:22:20 -0200, Olivier Hallot wrote:
> pt-BR uses a lot D/M
In master
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/libreoffice/core/commit/?id=74fea31257372746caf81148a1be9cff1fe36728
Thanks
Eike
--
LibreOffice Calc developer. Number formatter stricken i18n transpositioniz
Hi Andrea,
On Thursday, 2012-01-12 23:50:34 +0100, Andrea Pescetti wrote:
> I'd say that Italian (it) uses "D/M"; e.g., today's date would be
> commonly written as 12/1 in Italian.
In master
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/libreoffice/core/commit/?id=90a94c55077cff0f0077ff46618365970c07223f
Thanks