Legacy Source Methodology Redirect Guide guide
Best use: Use Legacy Source Methodology Redirect Guide when you want to understand how DayMoon handles sources, corrections, privacy, terms, editorial boundaries, or the difference between date facts and planning ideas.
Verify: site policy explain what this site can support. Date rules, official names, and source scopes are treated differently from customs, food ideas, travel ideas, and classroom suggestions.
Next step: Return to today. Trust pages stay connected to the working calendar so you can return to the date answer after checking the policy boundary.
The practical rule is simple: use DayMoon for planning context, then use official sources for closures, eligibility, school schedules, payroll, public offices, travel bookings, and local events.
Corrections matter because calendar pages can affect real plans. If a date, source, label, or wording note looks wrong, the corrections path gives readers a place to flag it for review.
Privacy and terms content stays plain. The useful questions are what the site collects, what it does not collect, what assets are original, and what users need to verify outside the site.
When a source rule, privacy practice, or editorial policy changes, the trust page needs the same care as a holiday page. That gives readers a durable place to check boundaries before relying on the calendar.
For source questions, look for the official-source panel on holiday and moon pages. That panel points to federal, state, territory, tax, moon, or methodology sources where available, while the trust pages explain how those links are chosen and what they do not prove.
For corrections, include the page URL, the disputed date or wording, and the source that supports the correction. That makes it possible to review the issue as a calendar problem rather than as a vague content preference.