<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head></head><body><figure class="quote"><figcaption><anchor-end xmlns="urn:x-suika-fam-cx:markup:suikawiki:0:9:" a0:anchor="1" xmlns:a0="urn:x-suika-fam-cx:markup:suikawiki:0:9:">[1]</anchor-end> <cite xml:lang="en">February 30 - Wikipedia</cite>
(<time>2016-12-24 01:42:14 +09:00</time>)
<anchor-external xmlns="urn:x-suika-fam-cx:markup:suikawiki:0:9:" a0:resScheme="URI" xmlns:a0="urn:x-suika-fam-cx:markup:suikawiki:0:9:" a0:resParameter="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/February_30">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/February_30</anchor-external></figcaption><blockquote><p>March 0 is an imaginary date, used (most often in astronomy and software engineering) to refer to the last day of February, as a way of allowing for the fact that the number of days in February varies in leap years.<strong>[</strong>6<strong>]</strong><strong>[</strong>7<strong>]</strong></p></blockquote></figure></body></html>