Originally posted by: DeviousTrap
jan 1st to dec 31st
Unless you have a calendar that starts on March 22nd?
Originally posted by: kcthomas
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Originally posted by: Mday
Originally posted by: kcthomas
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calendar year is date to date next year -1. So, one calendar year starting today, effectively ends March 21, 2007. It is 365 days, or 366 if it's a leap year.
Originally posted by: Lord Evermore
Originally posted by: Mday
Originally posted by: kcthomas
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calendar year is date to date next year -1. So, one calendar year starting today, effectively ends March 21, 2007. It is 365 days, or 366 if it's a leap year.
See I thought that's what it meant, every financial report or anything else official always mentions calendar years that way. But I don't see the point -- is one year not a year if you don't specify that we're using the common calendar? Or is it just a paranoid, lawyer-age thing where they have to specify it in case somebody says "I thought you meant 365 days not 366" after a leap year and they do something stupid on the last day of it.
Originally posted by: Lord Evermore
Originally posted by: Mday
Originally posted by: kcthomas
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calendar year is date to date next year -1. So, one calendar year starting today, effectively ends March 21, 2007. It is 365 days, or 366 if it's a leap year.
See I thought that's what it meant, every financial report or anything else official always mentions calendar years that way. But I don't see the point -- is one year not a year if you don't specify that we're using the common calendar? Or is it just a paranoid, lawyer-age thing where they have to specify it in case somebody says "I thought you meant 365 days not 366" after a leap year and they do something stupid on the last day of it.
Originally posted by: YetioDoom
Originally posted by: Lord Evermore
Originally posted by: Mday
Originally posted by: kcthomas
...
calendar year is date to date next year -1. So, one calendar year starting today, effectively ends March 21, 2007. It is 365 days, or 366 if it's a leap year.
See I thought that's what it meant, every financial report or anything else official always mentions calendar years that way. But I don't see the point -- is one year not a year if you don't specify that we're using the common calendar? Or is it just a paranoid, lawyer-age thing where they have to specify it in case somebody says "I thought you meant 365 days not 366" after a leap year and they do something stupid on the last day of it.
I think you're mis-reading the report. A calendar year is Jan. 1st - Dec. 31st.