I didn't ask this question, but I found the close reasons confusing.
The question was initially closed as "Not suitable for this site" with a custom close reason:
I’m voting to close this question because it is not about "code" but instead asks why a perfectly reasonable implementation choice of a particular piece of software is unexpected to the asker. Such questions should instead be directed to the vendor of the software.
The question was then reopened and closed again with the reason "Opinion-based" with another comment:
@alex you are asking why Postgres date arithmetic works in a particular way. We cannot speak for why Postgres developers/architects made the choices they made. We can only express our guesses at why, which cannot be "correct" or "incorrect" as they are opinions. I've changed the close reason to "opinion based" to reflect this.
It's been left closed by other reviewers, all the same, for both reasons. I've searched around trying to understand these reasons:
Is asking for an explanation of some code on-topic?
"Explain X to me" questions: How to react?
How to handle "Explain how this ${code dump} works" questions
As far as I can tell, the question is about code, and it has a reproducible example with clear results that the asker finds confusing. Asking a "why" question is not necessarily off-topic, if it is specific enough. It is not a broad question. In fact, it's pretty much as narrow in focus as it can be. The entire architecture is not in question here or why it was made that way. Even the accepted answer is very fact based and doesn't involve developers' opinions. What am I missing? Is this just a subjective, what feels right, type of a situation?
If you don't know how PostgreSQL "interval" behaves, would that question and answer not help you?