On 2019-09-11, Curt <cu...@free.fr> wrote: > On 2019-09-10, Sven Joachim <svenj...@gmx.de> wrote: >> On 2019-09-10 22:06 +0200, Rainer Dorsch wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> after an upgrade from stretch to buster, the date default output changed on >>> my >>> system >>> >>> As an example: >>> >>> Tue Sep 10 19:50:26 CEST 2019 (stretch) >>> Tue 10 Sep 2019 09:26:33 PM CEST (buster) >>> >>> I am just wondering if this is a known issue or if another configuration >>> change >>> during the upgrade caused this. >> >> The default format very much depends on your locale. In the en_US.UTF-8 >> locale I also see the difference, but I think it's a bug fix. The >> buster output looks more like what an American user would expect. If >> you don't like it, set LC_TIME to something else, e.g. en_GB.UTF-8. > > You'd assume Americans would be less bewildered without the > "military-style" 24 clock (I remember old dad quizzing me when I was a 24-hour clock > kid: "What time's 1700 hours?"), but then again our rather unique > habit of putting the month before the day (as in mm-dd-yyyy) is reversed > by the upgrade, so it seems to be a tie cultural imperialism-wise. > >> Cheers, >> Sven >> >> > >
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