Rare Usa-China w.

  • Fiery@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 days ago

    I will never accept the first floor as being the second floor.

    The ground floor is the ground floor. It is the same level as where you enter and every other floor is relatively up or down from it.

    Most of the time I don’t care what conventions people use. No system of measurements is right or wrong, it’s all a matter of what you’re raised with. But this is one of those cases where the convention used by a lot of people is simply wrong and I won’t accept it.

    The right three systems make sense, the first two are so un-logical they should be banned.

    • Krem [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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      4 days ago

      “I won first place!” “congrats to your silver medal. I won ‘ground place’ and got the gold medal.”

      “have you ever done this before?” “this is the first time, so I’ve only done it once before (which is called the ground time).”

      January 2 is the first day of the year. January 1? Ground day.

      ukkk

    • Kefla [she/her, they/them]@hexbear.net
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      4 days ago

      So which one is the first floor you encounter when you enter the building? Do you normally climb a ladder to get in your house, or do you enter your house on the ground floor? Is the ground floor the first floor you encounter when you enter or is it not?

      • Fiery@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 days ago

        If you take the stair down from the ground floor, the second floor you see is the basement top level. Do you call that the second floor then? Is the order of floors decided by the first guy that walked into the building with floor numbers (after they forgot the 0 sign ofc). Does the floor numbering for each building depend on whether they wanted to start upwards or downwards that day?

        Your ‘first floor you see’ way of thinking only holds up for the ground floor. Meanwhile just pure rational (mathematical even) +/- X from ground floor is logic all the way around

        • crosswind [she/her, they/them]@hexbear.net
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          4 days ago

          Your ‘first floor you see’ way of thinking only holds up for the ground floor.

          Yes, but that thinking does hold up for that case. If it really bothers you that people take different paths through buildings, then the answer is to strictly stop naming floors sequentially (third floor, fourth floor, …) and only index them (floor 3, floor 4, …). In that case, floor 0 can be wherever you want.

          Which floor you encounter 2nd in a building will depend on if you go up or down, sure, but for most buildings, every single person will have the same first floor they enter. It’s ridiculous to have something called the “first floor” that is literally no one’s first floor when there’s a floor that everyone has to enter first.

        • Kefla [she/her, they/them]@hexbear.net
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          4 days ago

          If you’ve got a building that has only basement levels aside from the ground floor, I feel like the first basement level being the “second floor” is completely valid. The reason we usually use a different system for basement floors is because there’s already a second floor that isn’t the first basement level.

          Meanwhile just pure rational (mathematical even) +/- X from ground floor is logic all the way around

          If we want to be purely mathematically rational then we’re either using the US system where the ground floor is the first floor or we’re using the Russian system where the ground floor is floor 0. Either way, we need to acknowledge that the ground floor is the start of the count. You can’t just say it’s not a floor because it happens to be the place where you entered.