5

I added a certification starting September 2018 to my developer story and marked the certification as current. The date math, however, shows eleven months:

Certification date bug example

I can't think of a way the date math through July 10, 2019, would legitimately compute as greater than ten months. September 1, 2018, through July 31, 2019, could be eleven months, though waiting until August 1 seems simpler.

In Developer Story, Jan..Sep counts as only 8 months describes what seems like the opposite problem, but it is marked . Perhaps this issue is an artifact of that change?

Developer Story: total duration for jobs that have just years seem incorrect could be related as well.

In short, I would expect the date math to show ten months rather than eleven months.

3
  • 5
    If it ignores the days and just count months, you get September, October... June, July = 11 months. That's effectively the same thing as September 1, 2018, through July 31, 2019, but a much more basic program counting months instead of days.
    – Davy M
    Jul 10, 2019 at 18:52
  • 1
    @DavyM Fair point. I think the linked questions have gone through this logic some. Arguably, though, if one intends to compute a duration, one point to the same point makes more sense as zero. For example, September 2018 - September 2018 seems in a way like it should be zero, not one, but I could see the opposite argument as well. Sept.-Oct. 2018, on the other hand, seems more like one month to me instead of two, which is the logic I applied in my post. In summary, date math is bad.
    – Andrew
    Jul 10, 2019 at 20:07
  • 4
    I think this is an application of "common sense" that would be appreciated by a hiring manager rather than "accuracy" that would be appreciated by a dev. If you worked at a place from September to July the guy reading your resumé would be unsurprised to see it rounded up to 11 months in the absence of a date saying 30th sep to 1st July. It's a win for you because it overviews your experience as longer than it is, and while it might not appeal to the mathematician in you I think it will do you a favor while appealing to the target audience
    – Caius Jard
    Jul 11, 2019 at 5:54

0

You must log in to answer this question.

Browse other questions tagged .