Forum Discussion
Jan_Wijninckx
Sep 05, 2025Brass Contributor
Excel 365: dd-mmm-yyyy now gives Sept instead of Sep
Excel 365: dd-mmm-yyyy now gives Sept instead of Sep — that breaks the documented format standard. Who thought this was a good idea? They linked it to the Unicode locale standard. But it violates ...
SergeiBaklan
Sep 05, 2025Diamond Contributor
On which Excel platform (Win, Mac, web, etc) and which channel you are? I can't reproduce
on
- Jan_WijninckxSep 07, 2025Brass Contributor
Windows 11 Pro, 24H2
Office 365 subscription
NZ locale- SergeiBaklanSep 07, 2025Diamond Contributor
I didn't check all locales, but yes, English NZ and South Africa give Sept. For English US, UK, India, Canada, Philipines we have Sep.
I'm on
and 365 both Beta and Current.
- HansVogelaarSep 05, 2025MVP
I have the same version as SergeiBaklan, on Windows 11. I do see sept:
It's really annoying.