A few items:

Personally, I think there are two concerns

The value shown to the user:

This should be the localized value

And the ISO value commonly:

YYYY-MM-DD

We have tried using the ISO value for our customers, but they really  
don't like it. But it makes sense to standardize the passed value.

Secondly,Another calendar is spinelz.org

Lastly, the biggest problem I have had with calendars is having their  
styles be independent. So many calendars are great until incorporated  
into a main page where there are css style classes.

I am looking forward to trying this one!

Great work.

Deco


On Mar 10, 2007, at 9:25 PM, RobG wrote:

>
>
>
> On Mar 11, 12:19 pm, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Kjell Bublitz wrote:
>>> Cool thing :)
>>
>> Thanks !
>>
>>> You should add different Date formats based on locale aswell. Like:
>>> 10.03.2007 or 03-10-07
>>
>> This is already handled, if we are in english locale the mm-dd-yyyy
>> format is used, dd-mm-yyyy is used otherwise.
>
> English is not a locale, it is a language spoken in a great many
> locales.  It is not reasonable to expect that someone using English
> will require a date format that is specific to a particular country
> that happens to speak English.
>
> The ISO date standard is the place to start for international date
> formats:
>
> <URL: http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/popstds/ 
> datesandtime.html
>>
>
>
> --
> Rob
>
>
> >


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