vote up 6 vote down star

A table can have 1 index, or it has two or more ind...???

Is it Indexes or Indices? I'm just asking since I've noticed that they're both used quite often. Even the Wikipedia page seems to support both spellings, although it prefers to use Indexes.

Or, just to make it simple... Which spelling is the preferred one?

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(-1) It is not programming related. Although using indices IS programming related, the grammar surrounding the issue is not. Mostly because programming statements approximate but ARE NOT THE SAME as English grammatical language. – devinb Jun 16 at 13:59
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Actually, it is programming-related when you create an application and display the wrong spelling! You're forgetting that using an incorrect spelling in your GUI could result in potential clients who'll just look for someone with better spelling. Anyway, there's too much confusion about this single word. – Workshop Alex Jun 16 at 16:09
Please unmark that best answer! English only looks that way to grammar teachers. If there's no ambiguity and the people accept both (the WSJ, dictionary.com, whoever) then the rule is just more language fascism (note, "language" is an adjective there, were you confused?). – yar Jun 16 at 16:33
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Since English is not my native language, I find the checked answer (explaining about plural and noun) just the right answer, so I don't want to uncheck it. Even though both spellings are correct, it's just a good explanation to customers if they ever wonder why I talk about "indices" instead of "indexes". – Workshop Alex Jun 17 at 7:49
I prefer "indexs". :-P Not. Actually, I write indices, appendices, formulae, analyzes, parentheses, criteria... I like the formal plurals, even if it is against the current trend of syntax simplification... – PhiLho Jun 17 at 11:49

11 Answers

vote up 28 vote down check

This page makes a clear distinction:

"The plural of the noun index should always be indices. This handily distinguishes it from the present tense of the verb index, which can only be indexes."

-http://federalist.wordpress.com/2006/09/28/grammar-indexes-vs-indices/

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Well, that makes sense. Indexes if it's a verb, Indices if it's a noun. – Workshop Alex Jun 16 at 13:11
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actually, both are perfectly valid English – geowa4 Jun 16 at 13:12
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Which reminds me... Is anyone going to fix all those wikipedia pages where Indexes is used as noun and Indices as verb? ;-) – Workshop Alex Jun 16 at 13:14
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Interesting (and it matches my preference). But for the sake of playing devil's advocate, merriam-webster lists both - merriam-webster.com/dictionary/index – Simon P Stevens Jun 16 at 13:15
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@WorkshopAlex: Are you volunteering? =:) – Simon P Stevens Jun 16 at 13:17
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vote up 1 vote down

I prefer Indices.

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vote up 3 vote down

indices

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/index

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vote up 0 vote down

Both are valid. I prefer indexes, as it easily convey the meaning.

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are we voting or answering :) I vote Indexes b/c that is what I always use.

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vote up 11 vote down

He indexes into indices.

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vote up 4 vote down

Both are valid English; that is why you see both used. One person may be used to the other, while the guy down the hall says it the other way. See dictionary.com if you haven't already.

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Also in the Oxford Dictionary of English, something like "plural: "indexes" or "indices" (especially in technical writing)". – Richard Jun 16 at 13:24
But I live by myself. – JoeCool Jun 16 at 13:26
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Good question.

I generally feel that "indices" is more correct, but "indexes" more common. So when not trying to be extra highbrow, I uses "indexes".

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vote up 0 vote down

One isn't more correct than the other. We speak English, not Latin.

However, if you restrict it to databases, I think the more common spelling is indexes, and Google supports me on this.

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googlefight.com/index.php?lang=en_GB&word1=&q…; – Nosredna Jun 16 at 13:24
Well quite; but array indices and database indexes are different beasts. I would probably use "array indices", but on the other hand, I would also say "Oracle indexes". – simonn Jun 16 at 13:48
Language is not a popularity contest! Or is it? – yar Jun 16 at 16:28
"Language," William S. Burroughs reminded us, "is a virus from outer space." – Nosredna Jun 16 at 17:59
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Just avoid "index" as a noun. Use it as an adjective. "Index Columns" or fields or whatever.

Another solution is to go with the more fun, "indexerizers" or "indexers"... it depends if you want people to take you seriously or not.

"Thing" and "thingers" are generally good, and I prefer them to actually saying what I'm talking about.

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He indexes the indexed indices? :-) Well, it was just something I noticed when some application that I used to generate documentation for my database continuously used "Indexes" instead of "Indices" as noun. Since I'm not a native English-speaking person, it tends to be confusing. Actually, in Dutch, Index has the same meaning but only as noun. The verb is "indexeren" in dutch, thus making a clearer difference. Then again, in dutch, the plural of the index verb is either "indexen" or "indices"... Am really disliking this word now. :-) – Workshop Alex Jun 16 at 13:38
I think the point in English, or at least my point, is that being correct doesn't matter as much, since the word's placement lets you know whether it is a noun or a verb. But check federalist.wordpress.com/2006/09/… ... basically, if it's good enough for the the conservative WSJ people, you should probably get used to it and use one MWF and the other Tuesday and Thursday. – yar Jun 16 at 16:27
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if all the big dictionaries are pandering to ignorance, it explains how English became the ridiculously difficult language it is. Indices is the plural. Don't give me two different ways to spell it, that would give rise to debates like this for no good reason.

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