rantingrick wrote:
On Aug 7, 9:10 am, Steven D'Aprano <st...@remove-this-
cybersource.com.au> wrote:
On Sat, 07 Aug 2010 08:54:28 -0400, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
On Sat, 07 Aug 2010 13:48:32 +0200
News123 <news1...@free.fr> wrote:
It makes sense in assembly language and even in many byte code
languages. It makes sense if you look at the internal representation of
unsigned numbers (which might become an index)
For a complete beginner common sense dictates differently and there
might be confusion why the second element in a list has index 1.
Would said beginner also be surprised that a newborn baby is zero years
old or would it be more natural to call them a one year old?  Zero based
counting is perfectly natural.
There's nothing natural about saying that a baby is zero years old. A
newborn baby is "a newborn baby", then it's "one day old", "two days
old", ... "one month old", "two months old", ... "one year old".

Well not if you are referring to how people "say" things. But what
people "say" and the facts of reality are some times two different
things. Heck we even have a few folks in this group who overuse the
expression "used to" quite frequently in place of the more correct
term "previously" -- i won't give names. But if i did i would start at
index zero!

There's nothing wrong with "used to", but "more correct"? It either _is_
correct or _isn't_ correct.

And it's "I", not "i". :-)

When any object is "born" (whether it be a life form, or a planet, or
even a class instance) "it" will be zero years old until 1 year of
time has passed has passed. If you want to properly describe age you
could say a baby who was born five minutes ago is...

 - 0 millenniums

millennia

 - 0 centuries
 - 0 decades
 - 0 years
 - 0 months
 - 0 days
 - 0 hours
 - 5 minutes
 - 60*5 seconds
 - (60*5)*1000 millisecond
 - crikey i'm tired!

Just because Aunt Martha is is too lazy to list out the details that
has no effect on reality. YES a newborn is zero years old. YES, a
newborn is zero months old, ...an so on.

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