The more customary writing method in China is 2009/10/7, in the format of year/month/day.
Each country has different eye habits and writing habits. For example, in Russia, the locals are used to writing 7/10/2009.
It mainly depends on the local writing method. If you write 5/6 in China, it will generally be understood as May 6th without special instructions. In European and American countries, they will understand 6/5 as May 6th.
Extended information:
In daily life and various documents drafted, we usually use dates. If the date is written in various formats, it will not only be ugly but also easily confused with the data, making it difficult to People have misunderstandings, which will have a certain impact on work. The date writing format should be:
1. The standard date format of the Gregorian calendar is: June 1, 2015 (or 2015-06-01). The standard format of the Chinese (lunar calendar) date is: June 1, 2015 (or Xinsi month 15, Yiwei year).
2. The date must not be written with a decimal point or a comma instead of the year, month and day. Such as 2015.06.01, 2015, 06, 01.
3. The year, month and day must be written in full and cannot be abbreviated to June 1, 2015 or 15-06-01.
4. Chinese characters should be used in the article when it comes to the Chinese stems and branches and the lunar month and day. For example, the fifteenth day of the Xinsi month in the Yiwei year, etc.
5. All references in the article to the historical chronology of China’s Qing Dynasty and before the Qing Dynasty, as well as the non-Gregorian calendar chronology of various ethnic groups, etc., use Chinese characters. Such chronology should not be mixed with the Gregorian calendar months and days, and Arabic numerals should be used. Including the Gregorian calendar. For example, in the forty-fourth year of Duke Wen of Qin (722 BC).
Note: The date is not explicitly specified, so it depends on personal habits.