From 88c79031efd681aaf96c2148de52221baadc1fb7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gennyble Date: Sun, 8 Dec 2024 06:53:59 -0600 Subject: 2024-12-08 06:53 CST --- served/words/alternate-ifc-formatting.html | 28 ---------------------------- 1 file changed, 28 deletions(-) delete mode 100755 served/words/alternate-ifc-formatting.html (limited to 'served/words/alternate-ifc-formatting.html') diff --git a/served/words/alternate-ifc-formatting.html b/served/words/alternate-ifc-formatting.html deleted file mode 100755 index 41f19bf..0000000 --- a/served/words/alternate-ifc-formatting.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,28 +0,0 @@ ---- -template=post -title=Alternate IFC Formatting -style=/styles/post.css -style=writing.css - -published=2024-07-20 AHH TODO DATE ---- - -I really like weird date formats. The kind of stand-out alternate date format -in my mind is Arvelie -devised by Devine Lu Linvega. - -Arvelie splits the year into 26 months of 14 days each. - ---- - -Arvelie splits the year into 26 months of 14 days each. The year is "when you start journaling" -which I really, very much like. It makes it a kind of relative calendar to whatever you want. -It makes it feel a little more personal, I think. - -Each Arvelie month is a character in the alphabet. The year and day are zero-indexed -which means, if you started journaling in 2020, January 5rd of 2023 is 02A04. - -If you've done the math, 26 * 14, you'll notice there's a day missing—or -even two for leap years! Arvelie handles this rather elegantly. The Year Day, the -last day of the year, is notated with 01. So, with the same start year, -if it was December 31st, 2032, the date would be written was 12+01. \ No newline at end of file -- cgit 1.4.1-3-g733a5