Time and date formats/New version
This page is currently a draft |
When giving times and dates, such as for opening and closing times of attractions, restaurants and bars, use the following formatting guidelines.
Times
[edit]Use either the 24-hour format (09:30–17:00) or the 12-hour format (9:30AM–5PM). Do not use both within one article – choose one by following predominant local usage. Ask yourself: "Which format will visitors see in timetables, on shop doors and in newspapers?"
It can be assumed that times are in the local time zone.
Regardless of format
[edit] 24 hours daily | For establishments that don't close use "24 hours daily". |
12-hour format
[edit] 9AM |
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9:15AM | Where minutes are shown, use a colon as the separator. |
midnight | Use "midnight" for 12PM and "noon" for 12AM. |
9:15AM–5PM |
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24-hour format
[edit] 09:00 |
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00:00 | Use 00:00 for midnight and 12:00 for noon. |
09:15–17:00 |
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Days
[edit] M Tu W Th F Sa Su | Abbreviate days to the minimum number of letters. |
Good Friday | Spell the day out when it is part of a named day. |
M–F |
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M Tu | Separate two consecutive days with a space only. |
M W F | Separate days that are not in a range with spaces only. |
M–F 09:15–17:00 | When combining days with time, put the days first. |
09:15–17:00 daily | For all seven days use only "daily". |
3–11PM (closed Tu) | For establishments open six days a week, state the day they are closed. |
Dates
[edit] 1 Jan 2001 | Use the date format of day–month–year.
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Durations
[edit] 2 yr | Years |
2 wk | Weeks |
2 hr | Hours |
2 min | Minutes |
5 hr 15 min | Hours and minutes (stick to one style for the whole article). |
Decades and centuries
[edit] the 1920s |
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the 19th century |
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