<Table> <Tr> <Td> Onsd 09 - 15 1 dec--15 maj </Td> </Tr> </Table> <Tr> <Td> Onsd 09 - 15 1 dec--15 maj </Td> </Tr> <P> In Sweden, alternate side parking (datumparkering) is applied in zones covering an entire city, with signs indicating this at the city perimeter . Inside such date zones (datumzon), parking is prohibited on the morning of odd dates on the side of the street where houses have odd numbers . The drivers must think of what date it is the next morning if they leave the car in the evening . Inspired by Stockholm, more and more Swedish cities are abandoning such confusing zones and instead provide permanent parking on one or both sides of the street, with the exception for one day per week during December through May, when snowplowing and sweeping of sand can be required . The day when parking is prohibited is posted on a sign for each street . </P> <P> In Denmark (datoparkering), the rules are exactly the opposite of those in Sweden, with parking prohibited on the morning of odd dates on the side of the street where houses have even numbers . </P>

How do you know what side of the street to park on