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I am writing technical documentation and I can guarantee, that it is in up-to-date status at the date I write it (or update it). How do I call this date in one or two words?

  • Denis Kulagin, the "how to call" and "how do I call" wordings are incorrect in English. You should replace the how with what. You would benefit from reading the discussion at this link http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/150325/how-do-we-call-something-in-english – Tristan r May 08 '14 at 11:31
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    @Tristan_r Many thanks for your comment! I am constantly trying to improve my English, but there is obviously room to grow! – Denis Kulagin May 08 '14 at 11:55
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    Denis Kulagin, you also need to edit the last line of your question. – Tristan r May 08 '14 at 16:44

3 Answers3

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"Latest revision: 2014-05-08."

Erik Kowal
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If you want to report that the status is what was valid at a particular date (but may have changed later): "Status/Accurate as at 30 February 2014"

If a regulation and it is to take force on a specific date (usually implies from that date onwards): "In force (as) from/Effective on 30 February 2014"

msam
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The actual date could be the last updated date but it would also be common to use the term current version or current at 'your date'

Frank
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