While installing a new beta version, we see the following message:
"Congratulations! Your existing license was purchased on 28/Dec/08 (see the license details below), and is less that 12 months older than the ExamDiff Pro version you are about to install. As a result, this version of ExamDiff Pro will install as a free upgrade."
I guess the "that" should be replaced by "than".
Also I think that there is no reason to save space for 2 more characters here, and 4 digits for year would look better - to prevent confusing with different international date formats. Example: Japan places year at the beginning, while Europe does the opposite, so "09/Apr/08" will look ambiguously.
Small typo in installer
Re: Small typo in installer
Good catch, will be fixed.I guess the "that" should be replaced by "than".
The date is displayed based on the user's regional settings, so there's no danger that anyone will be confused.Also I think that there is no reason to save space for 2 more characters here, and 4 digits for year would look better - to prevent confusing with different international date formats. Example: Japan places year at the beginning, while Europe does the opposite, so "09/Apr/08" will look ambiguously.
psguru
PrestoSoft
PrestoSoft
Re: Small typo in installer
1) Even if the date format is based on some settings, this fact is not obvious. Not everybody will come to this thread to know that the date format is based on regional settings.psguru wrote:The date is displayed based on the user's regional settings, so there's no danger that anyone will be confused.AlexL wrote:Also I think that there is no reason to save space for 2 more characters here, and 4 digits for year would look better - to prevent confusing with different international date formats. Example: Japan places year at the beginning, while Europe does the opposite, so "09/Apr/08" will look ambiguously.
2) If you use not your computer, you don't always have an idea about regional settings. Same may be relevant for your computer, but other user (eg., in case of MUI installed).
3) ISO 8601 prescribes, as a minimum, a four-digit year [YYYY] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601).
4) Two more useful characters won't harm anybody.
Re: Small typo in installer
I still have to disagree. The date format is the one that the user sees in all Windows programs, including Explorer. Here's what I see on my PC:
It's not a matter of adding two more digits (which incidentally already are there in the image above); we simply use a standard Windows API to format dates.
It's not a matter of adding two more digits (which incidentally already are there in the image above); we simply use a standard Windows API to format dates.
psguru
PrestoSoft
PrestoSoft