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ISO8601

Date and time (current at page generation, purge? to refresh)
expressed according to ISO 8601:
Date: 2017-05-03
Combined date and time in UTC: 2017-05-03T14:38:02+00:00
2017-05-03T14:38:02Z
20170503T143802Z
Week: 2017-W18
Date with week number: 2017-W18-3
Date without year: --05-03
Ordinal date: 2017-123
YYYY
±YYYYY
YYYY-MM-DD or YYYYMMDD
YYYY-MM (but not YYYYMM)
--MM-DD or --MMDD
YYYY-Www or YYYYWww
YYYY-Www-D or YYYYWwwD
YYYY-DDD or YYYYDDD
hh:mm:ss.sss or hhmmss.sss
hh:mm:ss or hhmmss
hh:mm or hhmm
hh
<time>Z
<time>±hh:mm
<time>±hhmm
<time>±hh
<date>T<time>
PnYnMnDTnHnMnS
PnW
P<date>T<time>
<start>/<end>
<start>/<duration>
<duration>/<end>
<duration>

ISO 8601 Data elements and interchange formats – Information interchange – Representation of dates and times is an international standard covering the exchange of date and time-related data. It was issued by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and was first published in 1988. The purpose of this standard is to provide an unambiguous and well-defined method of representing dates and times, so as to avoid misinterpretation of numeric representations of dates and times, particularly when data are transferred between countries with different conventions for writing numeric dates and times.

In general, ISO 8601 applies to representations and formats of dates in the Gregorian (and potentially proleptic Gregorian) calendar, times based on the 24-hour timekeeping system (including optional time zone information), time intervals and combinations thereof. The standard does not assign any specific meaning to elements of the date/time to be represented; the meaning will depend on the context of its use. In addition, dates and times to be represented cannot include words with no specified numerical meaning in the standard (e.g., names of years in the Chinese calendar) or that do not use characters (e.g., images, sounds).

In representations for interchange, dates and times are arranged so the largest temporal term (the year) is placed to the left and each successively smaller term is placed to the right of the previous term. Representations must be written in a combination of Arabic numerals and certain characters (such as "-", ":", "T", "W", and "Z") that are given specific meanings within the standard; the implication is that some commonplace ways of writing parts of dates, such as "January" or "Thursday", are not allowed in interchange representations.


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