Comment by jameshart
Yes, a language that was created in 1995 was entirely justified in adopting a convention that would break within five years.
Yes, a language that was created in 1995 was entirely justified in adopting a convention that would break within five years.
Why is nothing more important than backwards compatibility between disparate languages written in different contexts for different contexts?
That javascript chose to offset from 1900 was simply because every system back then used to, including Java.
Once that had been done, future versions of javascript had to maintain the same behaviour. This is where I'm using the backwards compatibility argument.
Java 1.0 (also released in '95) had the same behaviour. Java itself borrowed it from `struct tm` in libc, which has the same behaviour from back then up until today. It was standard back then. Whether we like it or not (I don't) doesn't change that fact. And like I said, nothing is more important than backwards compatibility.
It is just programmer education to know to add 1900 to years when using struct tm and also to use getFullYear() in JS.