Jump to content

Talk:12-hour clock: Difference between revisions

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Tag: Reverted
Table in noon and midnight section has incorrect entries: application-specific presentation of time
(47 intermediate revisions by 29 users not shown)
Line 3: Line 3:
|aciddate=31 October 2007
|aciddate=31 October 2007
}}
}}
{{WikiProject Time|class=C|importance=High}}
{{to do|3}}
{{to do|3}}
{{User:MiszaBot/config
{{User:MiszaBot/config
Line 18: Line 17:
}}
}}
{{American English}}
{{American English}}
{{WikiProject banner shell|class=C|vital=yes|
{{WikiProject Time|importance=High}}
}}
{{Archive box |search=yes |bot=Lowercase sigmabot III |age=3 |units=months |index=/Archive index |
{{Archive box |search=yes |bot=Lowercase sigmabot III |age=3 |units=months |index=/Archive index |
* [[Talk:12-hour clock/Archive 1|Archive 1]] <small>(June 2003 – Dec 2009)</small>
* [[Talk:12-hour clock/Archive 1|Archive 1]] <small>(June 2003 – Dec 2009)</small>
* [[/Archive 2|Archive 2]] <small>(Jan 2010 – 2012)</small>
* [[/Archive 2|Archive 2]] <small>(Jan 2010 – 2012)</small>
}}
}}

==What links here==
*[[1 A.M.]], [[2 A.M.]], [[3 A.M.]], [[4 A.M.]], [[5 A.M.]], [[6 A.M.]], [[7 A.M.]], [[8 A.M.]], [[9 A.M.]], [[10 A.M.]], [[11 A.M.]], [[12 A.M.]],
*[[1 P.M.]], [[2 P.M.]], [[3 P.M.]], [[4 P.M.]], [[5 P.M.]], [[6 P.M.]], [[7 P.M.]], [[8 P.M.]], [[9 P.M.]], [[10 P.M.]], [[11 P.M.]], [[12 P.M.]],
..these should all link here. [[User:In ictu oculi|In ictu oculi]] ([[User talk:In ictu oculi|talk]]) 23:44, 15 March 2019 (UTC)

==Incorrect statement added to "Clock system" table==
In [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=12-hour_clock&type=revision&diff=904041373&oldid=904039735 this edit] [[User:Woodstone|Woodstone]] added the phrase "''shown as start of next day''" to the entry for 24:00. I'm not sure what the heading of this table might have been in the past, but now it is "Clock system", which is a rather general term, and certainly does not limit the information to what would be seen on the face of a digital or analog clock. It could apply to any textural display of time-of-day, such as books, timetables or the like. In such a setting, "24:00" is sometimes encountered, and it means that the midnight is being treated as part of the day that is ending, rather than part of the day that is beginning. The statement "''shown as start of next day''" is a confusing statement. If it's displayed as "24:00" it isn't treated as the start of the next day. If it's displayed as "00:00" then it's covered by the first line in the table. [[User:Jc3s5h|Jc3s5h]] ([[User talk:Jc3s5h|talk]]) 15:51, 29 June 2019 (UTC)

:I have not added that line, but reverted its removal after it had been there for a very long time. It is in the column for the 12-hour clock, which does not have a separate expression for midnight at the end of the day. Instead, in that clock system, the end of a day is always expressed as the start of the next day. That is valuable information and answer to lots of discussion. Also it completes the day and the comparision to the 24-hour system. &minus;[[User:Woodstone|Woodstone]] ([[User talk:Woodstone|talk]]) 16:12, 29 June 2019 (UTC)
::The section [[12-hour clock#Confusion at noon and midnight|"Confusion at noon and midnight"]] provides several reliable sources that indicate midnight can mean either the beginning or end of the day, or which disagree with one another. ''The Associated Press Style Book'' (2008) is cited; I will update it to the latest edition, 2019. It directly contradicts your proposition:
::{{quote|'''midnight''' Do not put 12 in front of it. It is part of the day that is ending, not the one that is beginning.}}
::[[User:Jc3s5h|Jc3s5h]] ([[User talk:Jc3s5h|talk]]) 16:49, 29 June 2019 (UTC)

:::The table shows variants of representation. So mention of representing midnight at the the end of a day as the beginning of the next day is warranted.&minus;[[User:Woodstone|Woodstone]] ([[User talk:Woodstone|talk]]) 14:36, 1 July 2019 (UTC)
::::The variant where midnight is thought of as the beginning of the day is already listed at the beginning of the table. I object to the addition, it is confusing. [[User:Jc3s5h|Jc3s5h]] ([[User talk:Jc3s5h|talk]]) 14:55, 1 July 2019 (UTC)

:::::You keep calling it an addition, but the phrase has been in the article for many years. It is there because it reflects the real confusion that exists about what exactly are 12 am and pm in the 12-hour clock and makes it explicit. &minus;[[User:Woodstone|Woodstone]] ([[User talk:Woodstone|talk]]) 07:36, 2 July 2019 (UTC)

::::::I just don't understand what the phrase means in the context of the table. [[User:Jc3s5h|Jc3s5h]] ([[User talk:Jc3s5h|talk]]) 11:48, 2 July 2019 (UTC)

The table indicates how the 12-hour clock expresses instants in time. One of them is midnight at the end of a day (such as in the expiry of a contract). How would one make sure that midnight at the end of a specific day is meant? Saying just "midnight", although orally used, is ambiguous in writing. This midnight has to be expressed as the beginning of the next day. &minus;[[User:Woodstone|Woodstone]] ([[User talk:Woodstone|talk]]) 14:49, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
:This is a completely wrong-headed approach. The term "midnight", unless accompanied by a clarifying phrase such as "at the end of the day" is inherently ambiguous. The ambiguity can be resolved by context, or by custom in a particular field. For example, most US newspapers follow the AP Stylebook which specifies that midnight belongs to the day that is ending, so US newspaper readers might get used to this idea in the context of a newspaper (or they might not, so the smart editor won't count on readers understanding this convention).
:It is not the purpose of the table to tell readers how to write "midnight" and surrounding words, it is to give a list of what happens. Midnight, in actual occurrence in writing, may belong to the day that is ending, the day that is beginning, or be an instant in time that separates the two days but belongs to neither.
:Any statement in Wikipedia's voice equivalent to your "This midnight has to be expressed as the beginning of the next day" is unacceptable. It agrees with some of the reliable sources and disagrees with others. Since high-quality sources disagree, Wikipedia cannot take a position one way or the other. [[User:Jc3s5h|Jc3s5h]] ([[User talk:Jc3s5h|talk]]) 15:02, 2 July 2019 (UTC)

::The last box in the table states precisely what you indicate here. Midnight as an instant in time can be viewed as begin or end of a day. That makes a difference when also a day is given or implied. The table gives alternatives for the way to write logical instants within a day and therefore has separate rows for each midnight bounding the day. The last point of the day can be written as "midnight" (with an implied "end of day"), or as the the beginning of the next day (12 a.m. with the next date). It gives alternatives and does not bias. &minus;[[User:Woodstone|Woodstone]] ([[User talk:Woodstone|talk]]) 06:28, 3 July 2019 (UTC)
:::The table already has a pointer to "Confusion at noon and midnight" which explains this. It is confusing to have a notation in the last line of the table but not the first. Perhaps the first line should have a notation "see also last line of table" and the notation in the last line should be changed to "see also first line of table". But if one line has a notation, the other line should have a reciprocal notation. [[User:Jc3s5h|Jc3s5h]] ([[User talk:Jc3s5h|talk]]) 11:47, 3 July 2019 (UTC)


== Table in noon and midnight section has incorrect entries ==
== Table in noon and midnight section has incorrect entries ==
Line 71: Line 45:
:::Noon isn't involved here. The explanation is in the adjoining text. [[User:Dbfirs|<span style="font-family: verdana;"><i style="color: blue;">D</i><i style="color: #0cf;">b</i><i style="color: #4fc;">f</i><i style="color: #6f6;">i</i><i style="color: #4e4;">r</i><i style="color: #4a4">s</i></span>]] 21:59, 19 November 2019 (UTC)
:::Noon isn't involved here. The explanation is in the adjoining text. [[User:Dbfirs|<span style="font-family: verdana;"><i style="color: blue;">D</i><i style="color: #0cf;">b</i><i style="color: #4fc;">f</i><i style="color: #6f6;">i</i><i style="color: #4e4;">r</i><i style="color: #4a4">s</i></span>]] 21:59, 19 November 2019 (UTC)
:::: Right. Sorry. Strike noon. Should be beginning of day instead. Thanks. (^_^) [[User:Betaneptune|Betaneptune]] ([[User talk:Betaneptune|talk]]) 22:43, 19 November 2019 (UTC)
:::: Right. Sorry. Strike noon. Should be beginning of day instead. Thanks. (^_^) [[User:Betaneptune|Betaneptune]] ([[User talk:Betaneptune|talk]]) 22:43, 19 November 2019 (UTC)
:I support adding a row for computers, specifically spreadsheet date formats. - [[User:Msramming|Msramming]] ([[User talk:Msramming|talk]]) 18:02, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
::Computers hold time in seconds (or even microseconds) since a base moment last century (see [[Unix time]]). How that is presented in application and locale specific (for example, the US uses MM DD, YYYY; most of Europe uses DDMMYY, Japan uses YYYYMMDD). On a spreadsheet, you can equally choose how time is displayed. But it wouldn't be "computer time", it would be an application-specific presentation of time, so the line (if agreed we should have it) would be ''[[Microsoft Excel]] displays: ... ''. [[User:JMF|𝕁𝕄𝔽]] ([[User talk:JMF|talk]]) 19:15, 5 September 2024 (UTC)


== "Japanese legal convention [dubious]" ==
== "Japanese legal convention [dubious]" ==
Line 79: Line 55:
:The editor who added the template in [[Special:Diff/688937507]] said in the edit summary that ''dubious Japanese legal convention makes no mention of "AM/PM"'' and didn't discuss it any further. If the problem is that the linked source and Japanese in general don't use the abbreviations AM/PM then it's technically correct and it probably should use {{lang|ja|午前0時}}, {{lang|ja|午前12時}}, and {{lang|ja|午後12時}} in the table to be truthful to typographic conventions, but {{lang|ja|午前}} and {{lang|ja|午後}} are considered equivalent to English AM and PM so I'm not sure if that would be any improvement in the context of noon/midnight distinction.
:The editor who added the template in [[Special:Diff/688937507]] said in the edit summary that ''dubious Japanese legal convention makes no mention of "AM/PM"'' and didn't discuss it any further. If the problem is that the linked source and Japanese in general don't use the abbreviations AM/PM then it's technically correct and it probably should use {{lang|ja|午前0時}}, {{lang|ja|午前12時}}, and {{lang|ja|午後12時}} in the table to be truthful to typographic conventions, but {{lang|ja|午前}} and {{lang|ja|午後}} are considered equivalent to English AM and PM so I'm not sure if that would be any improvement in the context of noon/midnight distinction.
:I can't see any other fault in either the source or the way it was used here. Does anyone object just removing that template? –<i style="text-transform:lowercase">MwGamera</i> ([[User talk:MwGamera|talk]]) 06:22, 15 August 2021 (UTC)
:I can't see any other fault in either the source or the way it was used here. Does anyone object just removing that template? –<i style="text-transform:lowercase">MwGamera</i> ([[User talk:MwGamera|talk]]) 06:22, 15 August 2021 (UTC)
:: I have removed the dubious tag and added another column specifying the common usage of 0 PM for noon, since another source has explained the situation well. The fact is that the legalese is confusing therefore everyday use has deviated.-[[User:Miklcct|Miklcct]] ([[User talk:Miklcct|talk]]) 23:51, 19 January 2022 (UTC)


== 12 AM is noon and always has been ==
== 12 AM is noon and always has been ==
Line 86: Line 63:


::You are wrong about 12.00am and 12.00pm. The thing is that 12.00am comes directly after 11.59am and is am all the way through until it becomes 1.00pm - 12.00am - 12 midday - until the afternoon - 1 in the afternoon. Likewise, 12.00pm is 12 o'clock midnight and the time only becomes am (morning) when it becomes 1 in the morning - 1.00am. People have always got this wrong and I am surprised that Wikipedia is also making the same mistake.
::You are wrong about 12.00am and 12.00pm. The thing is that 12.00am comes directly after 11.59am and is am all the way through until it becomes 1.00pm - 12.00am - 12 midday - until the afternoon - 1 in the afternoon. Likewise, 12.00pm is 12 o'clock midnight and the time only becomes am (morning) when it becomes 1 in the morning - 1.00am. People have always got this wrong and I am surprised that Wikipedia is also making the same mistake.
::Many thanks, Dave Rattle (dave.rattle@gmail.com) <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/102.65.62.161|102.65.62.161]] ([[User talk:102.65.62.161#top|talk]]) 07:37, 28 May 2021 (UTC)</small>
::Many thanks, Dave Rattle <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/102.65.62.161|102.65.62.161]] ([[User talk:102.65.62.161#top|talk]]) 07:37, 28 May 2021 (UTC)</small>
:::Please have a look at any digital clock at any time between noon and 1 pm. What does the am/pm marker say? Case closed. &minus;[[User:Woodstone|Woodstone]] ([[User talk:Woodstone|talk]]) 12:38, 31 May 2021 (UTC)
:::Please have a look at any digital clock at any time between noon and 1 pm. What does the am/pm marker say? Case closed. &minus;[[User:Woodstone|Woodstone]] ([[User talk:Woodstone|talk]]) 12:38, 31 May 2021 (UTC)
::::Dave Rattle, 1) Don't put your contact information into discussions here. 2) If it is indeed am until 1:00pm, what do we make of 12:01 after noon? How about 12:00:01? 12:00:00.1? 12:00:00.00000....[insert any finite number of zeros you like]....0001? All of those times come AFTER noon, right? [[User:AzseicsoK|Uporządnicki]] ([[User talk:AzseicsoK|talk]]) 16:20, 8 September 2021 (UTC)

:::::The day starts at 12:00 am. Later we get 12:01 am, 12:59 am, 1:00 am, . . ., 11:59 am, 12:00 pm, 1:00 pm, . . ., 11:59 pm, 12:00 am. The most logical, the most-often used, and in fact, the de facto convention is that 12am is midnight at the beginning of the day and 12pm is noon. Every digital clock I've ever seen, including embedded systems, follows this de facto convention. If you need to set a clock or alarm to 12:00 on a 12-hour digital clock or embedded system, you better know and use the de facto convention, or you'll get it wrong! And it has never been the case that we switch from am to pm or vice versa at 1:00.

:::::The de facto convention is the most sensible, the most logical, follows the usual rollover rules with AM switching to PM and vice versa at 12:00, convention for the 12-hour clock. It also follows the KISS credo. Anything else is more complicated. And insisting that 12am and 12pm are illegitimate symbols for midnight and noon shows a slavish adherence to the definitions of am and pm that were made approx. 400 years ago. All other words are allowed to evolve. But for some reason, some people (fuddy-duddies), insist on using the original outdated, archaic definitions. It's well past, uh, time, to move on! Why make it more complicated than it has to be? [[User:Betaneptune|Betaneptune]] ([[User talk:Betaneptune|talk]]) 10:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
::::::If you want to make people do what you think is logical, get yourself appointed Secretary of Commerce or Secretary of Defence of the United States. Then you'll be in charge of one of the two agencies in the US responsible for time dissemination, and a few hundred million people might care what you think. Until then you're an anonymous Wikipedia editor, with the degree of recognition that goes with that position. [[User:Jc3s5h|Jc3s5h]] ([[User talk:Jc3s5h|talk]]) 16:40, 2 March 2024 (UTC)


== Does "Informal speech and rounding off" belong here? ==
== Does "Informal speech and rounding off" belong here? ==
it is useful, but most of the examples are not specific to 12 hour clock per se, could apply to 24hr time as well, I think[[User:Feldercarb|Feldercarb]] ([[User talk:Feldercarb|talk]]) 15:55, 8 June 2021 (UTC)
it is useful, but most of the examples are not specific to 12 hour clock per se, could apply to 24hr time as well, I think[[User:Feldercarb|Feldercarb]] ([[User talk:Feldercarb|talk]]) 15:55, 8 June 2021 (UTC)


== To add reference of a day start/end as per hindu calendar ==
== 12-hour clock is not smart ==

There are three reasons why 12-hour clock isn't smart.


- "AM" and "PM" are written after the minutes or seconds. They should be written before the hours because they are slow (increases by 1 every 12 hours).

- There is no leading zero, causing bumpiness.


It is notable to add the references of how the Hindu calendar defines the start of a day and end of day.
- The number zero doesn't exist on the clock, causing values to exceed 12 (The exact value of 12 in 12:30 PM is 12.5).


Extract from the page (Section: Sandhyakala in https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandhyavandanam)
As per Hindu traditional calendar, the day starts with sunrise (i.e. from midnight of previous night until sunrise is considered part of previous day).


[[Special:Contributions/2404:3C00:502F:4C80:344D:A0EF:9F58:117C|2404:3C00:502F:4C80:344D:A0EF:9F58:117C]] ([[User talk:2404:3C00:502F:4C80:344D:A0EF:9F58:117C|talk]]) 03:42, 5 September 2021 (UTC)
[[User:Thaejas|Thaejas]] ([[User talk:Thaejas|talk]]) 00:32, 11 September 2022 (UTC)
:This article is about the 12-hour clock. How would you add information about the traditional start of a day in the Hindu traditional calendar to this article? Also, [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia is not a reliable source| Wikipedia is not a reliable source]] so you would have to find [[WP:IRS| reliable sources]] for whatever you want to add. [[User:Jc3s5h|Jc3s5h]] ([[User talk:Jc3s5h|talk]]) 17:27, 12 September 2022 (UTC)

Revision as of 19:15, 5 September 2024

Article Collaboration and Improvement DriveThis article was on the Article Collaboration and Improvement Drive for the week of October 31, 2007.

Table in noon and midnight section has incorrect entries

The NIST line is wrong. 12:01 am is 12:01 am. How else can you distinguish 12:01 am from 12:00 am? If it were 12:01 am and someone asked you the time, you would say 12:01 am. But 12:01 am is midnight according to the table. So when someone says it's 12:01 am, is it 12:01 am or midnight? This is ridiculous.

You use 12:01 am and 11:59 pm only when down-to-the-minute accuracy is not needed. While NIST doesn't explicitly say this, it is strongly implied (use in contracts is mentioned) and the only sensible interpretation. The table should reflect this.

It's nice to see the U.S. gov't finally got it right! (^_^)

Also, how about an entry for computers? It's not just digital watches. In fact, it's not just computers. It's digital displays in general.

Betaneptune (talk) 19:40, 19 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Are there any objections to changing "digital watches" to "digital displays" or "clocks with digital displays" or "digital clocks"? The first one is really too specific. Betaneptune (talk) 20:54, 20 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
I don't mind changing "digital watches" to "clocks with digital displays" but you should start a new section rather than sticking this in the middle of a stale thread. Jc3s5h (talk) 22:36, 20 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, it could be clearer. The intention, of course, is that 11:59 p.m. lasts up to 11:59.99; there is no midnight (the contract time changes at the instant of midnight from 11:59 to 12:01 a.m.); and 12:01 starts at 12:00.01
How can we express this more clearly? This is for contexts where the date is more important than the time to the exact second. Dbfirs 21:08, 19 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
My only concern is that the table possibly gives the mistaken impression that 12:01 AM and 11:59 PM are midnight and noon, respectively. Perhaps I'm going too much by how the article was years ago, the last time I took an active part in it, when it was a disaster. My impression here is that 12:01 AM and 11:59 PM are being used as close enough to midnight and noon for most purposes, but still different, so as to make clear what day is meant. But the article and/or table isn't making that clear. So why not just state that? That is clearly the intent of the NIST bit. --Betaneptune (talk) 21:49, 19 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Noon isn't involved here. The explanation is in the adjoining text. Dbfirs 21:59, 19 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Right. Sorry. Strike noon. Should be beginning of day instead. Thanks. (^_^) Betaneptune (talk) 22:43, 19 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I support adding a row for computers, specifically spreadsheet date formats. - Msramming (talk) 18:02, 5 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Computers hold time in seconds (or even microseconds) since a base moment last century (see Unix time). How that is presented in application and locale specific (for example, the US uses MM DD, YYYY; most of Europe uses DDMMYY, Japan uses YYYYMMDD). On a spreadsheet, you can equally choose how time is displayed. But it wouldn't be "computer time", it would be an application-specific presentation of time, so the line (if agreed we should have it) would be Microsoft Excel displays: ... . 𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 19:15, 5 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The linked source didn't mention it being legally required or enforced (in fact, most digital watches follow the 11AM–12PM convention), but as someone who spent their childhood in Japan, I can tell you where it is used: television. Anchors on networks like NHK would always announce the time as 0 PM at noon, which means they use 0-indexed 12-hour notation. The linked source also mentioned that the 0-indexed 12-hour notation is taught at schools. 202.144.171.174 (talk) 16:31, 21 June 2020 (UTC)[reply]

What is the actual problem with it? The word legal in Japanese legal convention doesn't mean it's required to be used in digital watches or wherever but just that it's the convention used in Japanese legalese. One can find it used in the text of the law and in documents like vehicle insurance (per source). Here's the same thing put another way: [1]. As the source and comment above show, the convention used in TV, radio, etc that uses 0 PM for noon follows "how it's taught in school" and is actually a logical extension of the legal one that uses 0 AM (午前0時) for midnight but 12 AM (午前12時) for noon (although at least one regulation exists that used 午後零時, i.e. 0 PM; see ja:午前と午後#午前・午後の根拠). Both calling it Japanese legal convention and actual values shown in table in the current revision of the article seem accurate to me.
The editor who added the template in Special:Diff/688937507 said in the edit summary that dubious Japanese legal convention makes no mention of "AM/PM" and didn't discuss it any further. If the problem is that the linked source and Japanese in general don't use the abbreviations AM/PM then it's technically correct and it probably should use 午前0時, 午前12時, and 午後12時 in the table to be truthful to typographic conventions, but 午前 and 午後 are considered equivalent to English AM and PM so I'm not sure if that would be any improvement in the context of noon/midnight distinction.
I can't see any other fault in either the source or the way it was used here. Does anyone object just removing that template? –MwGamera (talk) 06:22, 15 August 2021 (UTC)[reply]
I have removed the dubious tag and added another column specifying the common usage of 0 PM for noon, since another source has explained the situation well. The fact is that the legalese is confusing therefore everyday use has deviated.-Miklcct (talk) 23:51, 19 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

12 AM is noon and always has been

12 AM has never been midnight, and it doesn't logically make sense for it to be so why are 12 AM and 12 PM swapped 2601:242:4100:F200:418B:F12F:5C3:F4C0 (talk) 00:38, 24 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Every Wikipedia editor is unreliable. All contentious statements made in Wikipedia must obey the verifiability policy. A reliable source, the 2008 edition of the US Government Printing Office Style Manual is cited in the article and says that 12 AM is midnight of the day that is beginning. The 2016 edition says the same thing on page 275 (which is page 289 of the PDF). Since there is a significant source that says 12 a.m. is midnight, your assertion "12 AM has never been midnight" is just wrong. Jc3s5h (talk) 00:50, 24 February 2021 (UTC)[reply]
You are wrong about 12.00am and 12.00pm. The thing is that 12.00am comes directly after 11.59am and is am all the way through until it becomes 1.00pm - 12.00am - 12 midday - until the afternoon - 1 in the afternoon. Likewise, 12.00pm is 12 o'clock midnight and the time only becomes am (morning) when it becomes 1 in the morning - 1.00am. People have always got this wrong and I am surprised that Wikipedia is also making the same mistake.
Many thanks, Dave Rattle — Preceding unsigned comment added by 102.65.62.161 (talk) 07:37, 28 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Please have a look at any digital clock at any time between noon and 1 pm. What does the am/pm marker say? Case closed. −Woodstone (talk) 12:38, 31 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Dave Rattle, 1) Don't put your contact information into discussions here. 2) If it is indeed am until 1:00pm, what do we make of 12:01 after noon? How about 12:00:01? 12:00:00.1? 12:00:00.00000....[insert any finite number of zeros you like]....0001? All of those times come AFTER noon, right? Uporządnicki (talk) 16:20, 8 September 2021 (UTC)[reply]
The day starts at 12:00 am. Later we get 12:01 am, 12:59 am, 1:00 am, . . ., 11:59 am, 12:00 pm, 1:00 pm, . . ., 11:59 pm, 12:00 am. The most logical, the most-often used, and in fact, the de facto convention is that 12am is midnight at the beginning of the day and 12pm is noon. Every digital clock I've ever seen, including embedded systems, follows this de facto convention. If you need to set a clock or alarm to 12:00 on a 12-hour digital clock or embedded system, you better know and use the de facto convention, or you'll get it wrong! And it has never been the case that we switch from am to pm or vice versa at 1:00.
The de facto convention is the most sensible, the most logical, follows the usual rollover rules with AM switching to PM and vice versa at 12:00, convention for the 12-hour clock. It also follows the KISS credo. Anything else is more complicated. And insisting that 12am and 12pm are illegitimate symbols for midnight and noon shows a slavish adherence to the definitions of am and pm that were made approx. 400 years ago. All other words are allowed to evolve. But for some reason, some people (fuddy-duddies), insist on using the original outdated, archaic definitions. It's well past, uh, time, to move on! Why make it more complicated than it has to be? Betaneptune (talk) 10:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If you want to make people do what you think is logical, get yourself appointed Secretary of Commerce or Secretary of Defence of the United States. Then you'll be in charge of one of the two agencies in the US responsible for time dissemination, and a few hundred million people might care what you think. Until then you're an anonymous Wikipedia editor, with the degree of recognition that goes with that position. Jc3s5h (talk) 16:40, 2 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Does "Informal speech and rounding off" belong here?

it is useful, but most of the examples are not specific to 12 hour clock per se, could apply to 24hr time as well, I thinkFeldercarb (talk) 15:55, 8 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]

To add reference of a day start/end as per hindu calendar

It is notable to add the references of how the Hindu calendar defines the start of a day and end of day.

Extract from the page (Section: Sandhyakala in https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandhyavandanam) As per Hindu traditional calendar, the day starts with sunrise (i.e. from midnight of previous night until sunrise is considered part of previous day).

Thaejas (talk) 00:32, 11 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]

This article is about the 12-hour clock. How would you add information about the traditional start of a day in the Hindu traditional calendar to this article? Also, Wikipedia is not a reliable source so you would have to find reliable sources for whatever you want to add. Jc3s5h (talk) 17:27, 12 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]