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ivan_pozdeev
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The idea of different formats in the column is to give an idea how long ago the event happened "with constant relative error" -- the rougher the larger the time gap is (like scientific notation).

So, the logical progression of diminishing accuracy would be something like this: (minutes ->) hours -> days (-> months) -> date -> year (-> century :P).

The reported case is perceived as a bug specifically because here, the abovementioned column's format logic is broken and, resulting in output that is ambiguousas a consequence, results in output that is ambiguous: a date two years ago looks the same as a date less than a year ago.

The idea of different formats in the column is to give an idea how long ago the event happened "with constant relative error" -- the rougher the larger the time gap is (like scientific notation).

So, the logical progression of diminishing accuracy would be something like this: (minutes ->) hours -> days (-> months) -> date -> year (-> century :P).

The reported case is perceived as a bug specifically because here, the abovementioned column's format logic is broken, resulting in output that is ambiguous: a date two years ago looks the same as a date less than a year ago.

The idea of different formats in the column is to give an idea how long ago the event happened "with constant relative error" -- the rougher the larger the time gap is (like scientific notation).

So, the logical progression of diminishing accuracy would be something like this: (minutes ->) hours -> days (-> months) -> date -> year (-> century :P).

The reported case is perceived as a bug specifically because here, the abovementioned column's format logic is broken and, as a consequence, results in output that is ambiguous: a date two years ago looks the same as a date less than a year ago.

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ivan_pozdeev
  • 35.8k
  • 3
  • 62
  • 84

The idea of different formats in the column is to give an idea how long ago the event happened "with constant relative error" -- the rougher the larger the time gap is (like scientific notation).

So, the logical progression of diminishing accuracy would be something like this: (minutes ->) hours -> days (-> months) -> date -> year (-> century :P).

The phenomenonreported case is perceived as a bug specifically because here, this progression is brokenthe abovementioned column's format logic is broken, resulting in output that is ambiguous: a date two years ago looks the same as a date less than a year ago.

The idea of different formats in the column is to give an idea how long ago the event happened "with constant relative error" -- the rougher the larger the time gap is (like scientific notation).

So, the logical progression of diminishing accuracy would be something like this: (minutes ->) hours -> days (-> months) -> date -> year.

The phenomenon is perceived as a bug specifically because here, this progression is broken, resulting in output that is ambiguous: a date two years ago looks the same as a date less than a year ago.

The idea of different formats in the column is to give an idea how long ago the event happened "with constant relative error" -- the rougher the larger the time gap is (like scientific notation).

So, the logical progression of diminishing accuracy would be something like this: (minutes ->) hours -> days (-> months) -> date -> year (-> century :P).

The reported case is perceived as a bug specifically because here, the abovementioned column's format logic is broken, resulting in output that is ambiguous: a date two years ago looks the same as a date less than a year ago.

Source Link
ivan_pozdeev
  • 35.8k
  • 3
  • 62
  • 84

The idea of different formats in the column is to give an idea how long ago the event happened "with constant relative error" -- the rougher the larger the time gap is (like scientific notation).

So, the logical progression of diminishing accuracy would be something like this: (minutes ->) hours -> days (-> months) -> date -> year.

The phenomenon is perceived as a bug specifically because here, this progression is broken, resulting in output that is ambiguous: a date two years ago looks the same as a date less than a year ago.