My memory's a little fuzzy on the matter, so do excuse me if I'm about to write a load of nonsense, but I remember coming across this a few years ago, and in the end left it be for English UK for lack of certainty.
At the time I remember considering the concept - Imagine you are scanning a document into a pdf with 6 A4 'sides' (3 sheets of paper) but they are numbered within like: frontpage, index, page 1, page 2, page 3 and page 4.
On your 3rd sheet of paper, page 4 (of the work) is actually on side 6.
Without digging into it back then, I presumed the strings were intentionally written in as they were to account for the non-interchangeablity between the three terms.
Each sheet is made up of a front side and a back side of course, and you may find yourself wishing to combine different sides (e.g. sides 3-6 inclusive in the example above contain the actually information, which is equivalent to asking for 'pages 1 - 4'?)
Alternatively, whether 'page' was used to mean 'sheet' instead, I can't recall.
My memory's a little fuzzy on the matter, so do excuse me if I'm about to write a load of nonsense, but I remember coming across this a few years ago, and in the end left it be for English UK for lack of certainty.
At the time I remember considering the concept - Imagine you are scanning a document into a pdf with 6 A4 'sides' (3 sheets of paper) but they are numbered within like: frontpage, index, page 1, page 2, page 3 and page 4.
On your 3rd sheet of paper, page 4 (of the work) is actually on side 6.
Without digging into it back then, I presumed the strings were intentionally written in as they were to account for the non-interchange ablity between the three terms.
Each sheet is made up of a front side and a back side of course, and you may find yourself wishing to combine different sides (e.g. sides 3-6 inclusive in the example above contain the actually information, which is equivalent to asking for 'pages 1 - 4'?)
Alternatively, whether 'page' was used to mean 'sheet' instead, I can't recall.