Cathy,

Of the other options, do you find some (or all) completely unacceptable?
Are some better than others?

- Cecelia

On 12/17/2012 10:59 AM, Cathy Smith (NOAA Affiliate) wrote:
Cecelia
I support 1) mostly for backward compatibility. I would also strongly encourage but not demand that users change their base dates to after 1800
when it makes sense to do so.

And, I (again) want to make sure that LTMs and their time values are addressed before any decisions are made as to negative times and using base dates of 1-1-1 and the issue of what year to use for climatologies. LTM dates are a problem when one needs to use a calendar based on real dates.

Cathy


On 12/12/12 9:04 AM, Cecelia DeLuca - NOAA Affiliate wrote:
Hi Steve, Jonathan and all,

There are not that many options being discussed.

With respect to the default calendar:

1 keep the Julian-Gregorian calendar as default (no change)
2 remove the Julian-Gregorian calendar as default, and have no default calendar (grid analogy) 3 replace the Julian-Gregorian calendar as default with the proleptic Gregorian calendar 4 replace the Julian-Gregorian calendar as default with a strict Gregorian calendar

Maybe it makes sense for people to cite (or rank) their preference at this point?

There were a couple other proposals, depending on which of above is selected: 5 create a strict Gregorian calendar (optional for 1, 2, 3 and needed for 4) 6 remove the Julian-Gregorian calendar (impossible for 1, optional for 2, 3, 4)

Again, maybe worth it to see where people are after the round of discussion?

Best,
Cecelia



On 12/10/2012 12:40 PM, Steve Hankin wrote:
Hi Jonathan,

I'm not sure if my remarks below conflict with your proposed resolution. But they do dispute the facts you assert, and these waters are so muddy that agreeing on the facts seems an important first step.

On 12/10/2012 1:21 AM, Jonathan Gregory wrote:
Dear Jon

Just to repeat a remark that Steve Hankin made whose implications have not been 
explored in this discussion: different countries adopted the Gregorian calendar 
at different times.  (Greece didn't adopt it till 1923!)  So what is considered 
a valid Gregorian date varies from country to country (and some of those 
countries don't even exist any more, or at least the boundaries have changed...)
2. The non-proleptic Gregorian calendar is extremely problematic for historical 
observations as well as for models (astronomers use the Julian calendar 
consistently for this reason).
Yes, that's right. Nonetheless I don't think we can abolish the real-world
calendar, despite its ambiguities, because*_it's the one we really use!_*

Are you sure this is true? Evidence seems to suggest that our community has _no use for the mixed Gregorian/Julian calendar at all_, except the need to resolve the backwards compatibility mess we have created for ourselves.

  * In everyday life we use is the modern Gregorian calendar, and
    are not concerned with historical calendar changes.
  * In numerical climate modeling we use the proleptic Greogorian
    calendar.  (I'll wager you there is no serious paleo-modeling
    done with an 11 day discontinuity in its time axis. )
  * What do Renaissance historians use when discussing dates that
    are rendered ambiguous by differing timings of the
    Julian/Gregorian transition in different locations?  Do any of
    us know? Does it effect any use of CF that we are aware of?

As you say, we should be clearer about what the real-world calendar means, in
cases where_users really want to use it._

Who are these users? Where is the user who intersects with our community and really wants to use the mixed Julian/Gregorian calendar? The only potential user I can think of would be a Renaissance historian looking at paleo climate model output. That hypothetical person would already understand that manual calendar translations were needed to make sense of precise dates at that time of history (and would almost surely shrug off an 11 day timing uncertainty in a paleo climate model outputs in any case).

As Cecelia said, lets drive a stake through the heart of this madness ... at least to the maximum degree we can given inescapable backwards compatibility concerns.

    - Steve


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