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Re: 0000 not 2400?
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2004 Oct 18, 22:04 -0700
From: Paul Hirose
Date: 2004 Oct 18, 22:04 -0700
The ISO 8601 notation for date and time allows both 0000 and 2400: "The end of one day (2400) coincides with 0000 at the start of the next day, e.g., 2400 on 1985 April 12 is the same as 0000 on 1985 April 13. If there is no association with a date or time-interval, both represent the same clock time in the 24-hour timekeeping system." Normally you would only use 2400 to express the end of a time interval. E.g., "The system will be down for maintenance from 2100 to 2400." On this page there's a link to download a PDF of the complete standard: http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/datefmts.htm