Date and time notation in Australia
Full date | 2 July 2024 |
---|---|
All-numeric date | 2024-07-02 02/07/2024 |
Time | 00:37 12:37 am [refresh] |
Date and time notation in Australia most commonly records the date using the day-month-year format (2 July 2024), while the ISO 8601 format (2024-07-02) is increasingly used for all-numeric dates. The time can be written using either the 12-hour clock (12:37 am) or the 24-hour clock (00:37).
Date
Australians typically write the date with the day leading, as in the United Kingdom and New Zealand:
- 2 July 2024
- 2024-07-02 or 02/07/2024
The ISO 8601 date format (2024-07-02) is the recommended short date format for government publications.[1] The first two digits of the year are often omitted in everyday use and on forms (02/07/24).
Weeks are most identified by the last day of the week, either the Friday in business (e.g., "week ending 19/1") or the Sunday in other use (e.g., "week ending 21/1"). Week ending is often abbreviated to "W/E" or "W.E." The first day of the week or the day of an event are sometimes referred to (e.g., "week of 15/1"). Week numbers (as in "the third week of 2007") are not often used, but may appear in some business diaries in numeral-only form (e.g., "3" at the top or bottom of the page). ISO 8601 week notation (e.g. 2024-W27) is not widely understood.[citation needed] Some more traditional calendars instead treat Sunday as the first day of the week.
Time
The Australian government allows writing the time using either the 24-hour clock (00:37), which is commonplace in technical fields such as military, aviation, computing, navigation, and the sciences; or the 12-hour clock (12:37 am). The before noon/after noon qualifier is usually written as "am" or "pm". A colon is the preferred time separator.[2]
References
- ^ Style manual for authors, editors and printers (6 ed.). John Wiley & Sons Australia. 2002. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-7016-3647-0.
- ^ "Numbers and measurement". GOV.AU Content Guide. Retrieved 23 July 2018.