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The relative date shown to the right of a question seems to be incorrect.

Due to an emergency, I had to come in to work today (a Sunday) and one of my last opened tabs was this question.

Screenshot

Note, how it says "active: yesterday". The pop-up shows "2015-03-27 14:06:49Z" which is definitely not yesterday, but the day before. The same is true for the comments to the question and its answer.

Update

The pop-up text comes from the <span> element's title tag which is periodically used to update the contents via Javascript. It should be trivial to determine when yesterday was since the script has both a UTC stamp (from the title) and the client's date and timezone for comparison.

* Before taking the screenshot and posting this question I took care of that emergency first.

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    "yesterday" means between 24 and 48 hours ago; that'll be "2 days ago" in about 2 hours 7 minutes.
    – Ben
    Mar 29, 2015 at 10:58
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    @Ben, For me, that word doesn't mean 'between 24 and 48 hours ago', it means, well, yesterday ! If it's Sunday, I expect 'yesterday' to mean Saturday, and not 'between 24 and 48 hours ago'. Should be fixed IMHO. Mar 29, 2015 at 11:13
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    Yes, but "yesterday" is relative depending on where in the world you live @JonasCz. For me, "yesterday" is 12 hours 15 minutes ago, if I were in Australia at the moment it's 22 hours 15 minutes ago.
    – Ben
    Mar 29, 2015 at 11:16
  • @Ben First off, I agree with JonasCz: yesterday is the day before today and not a time in an obscure range of hours. Secondly, those <span> elements are updated via Javascript which is a clientside thing; with the UTC stamp in its title, it's trivial to determine when yesterdays was. Irrelevant of which timezone you're in. Mar 30, 2015 at 6:15
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    @Ben: To emphasize Linus's point, yesterday should simply be measured in UTC, like every single other date-related aspect of SE. Problem solved, no further issues, case closed. Mar 30, 2015 at 20:51

1 Answer 1

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This is by design. It is yesterday for someone somewhere in the world still. Relative dates take this into account. Up to 24 hours ago is today, up to 48 hours ago is yesterday. In other words, relative times use Anywhere on Earth calendar designations.

You can always hover over a relative date to see the absolute timestamp, in ISO 8601 format. Times are always in the UTC timezone.

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    It's a shame HTML doesn't have a <time>-element for displaying a UTC time (optionally only chosen parts) in the local time-zone. May 20, 2015 at 13:30
  • This Answer is an explanation for this issue and why it occurs but the bug still exists. And having such a thing in this perfect platform is not acceptable.
    – Mehrdad
    Jan 25, 2022 at 8:46
  • @Mehrdad: It's not a bug. It works that way by design.
    – Cerbrus
    Jan 25, 2022 at 8:47
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    I got you. I want to see the correct date. How should I register the request for changing this design? @Cerbrus
    – Mehrdad
    Jan 25, 2022 at 8:53
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    @Mehrdad: Sorry that you find it unacceptable. Note however that I am a volunteer on this platform, not a developer, so telling me that you find this unacceptable is not going to have much effect.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jan 25, 2022 at 9:09
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    @Mehrdad: personally, I think the developers have more urgent matters to address, and I find the design acceptable, once I understood the reasoning. It could well be that others agree with me on that. However, if you want to see it changed and you've confirmed that there isn't already a feature request posted for this, you are free to post a new question with the feature-request tag. Do read the FAQ for proposing changes first.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jan 25, 2022 at 9:13
  • @MartijnPieters thank you for the accurate explanation and guide. I agree with you that there are more urgent matters to address, I just want to register this one as a known issue for the feature.
    – Mehrdad
    Jan 25, 2022 at 9:16

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