We got shoved into the deep end of UK light bulbs when we moved here from the US.
Rented a house where the previous tennant took all the light bulbs with them. Quickly discovered the fixtures in the house used 5 different sizes. Oh and lamp shades. Taking the shades with you when you move is a thing.
Pretty much everything invented after 1750 is done differently here. I had to learn how to fix a toilet, how to repair a door latch and dance the magic dance required to make a combi boiler heat a cold house. . And who's idea was it to put Wires under floorboards instead of in the walls?
Putting the wires in the floor makes perfect sense, people put cabinets, shelves, mirrors, pictures, TV sets, speakers and god what else on the walls, all are fixed with screws or nails, all of which could easily penetrate directly into live cables with nasty outcomes. Wires in the floor have to be a certain depth for safety and also when was the last time you either nailed or screwed anything to the floor, think about, and you'll see that it makes sense.
Also remember that the walls in most UK buildings have been here a long time and are made out of substantial things like brick and concrete, even the internal walls in many cases, whereas the US they make even the exterior walls out of ticky-tac* and it's not unusual for a US residential dwelling to have a short design life, sometime as short as 30 years. It's only relatively modern UK housing where all the interior walls are hollow.
The terraced house I'm in was built in the 19th Century and the internal walls are brick. It predates electricity and indoor plumbing (as is attested by the presence of a, now disused, outside toilet) as do probably most of the houses in the bit of East London that I'm in. The median age of a US residential dwelling according to the US NAHB was 37 years in 2015, 31 years in 2005. In the UK that's more like 70 years (about 50% of UK housing stock is WWII built or later).
Having chased out a few brick walls for cabling in my time I know very well why we don't put the bulk of the wiring there if we can help it.
* 'siding' for exterior walls is only used in the UK for things like industrial units, sheds and barns, and the average Briton would be horrified to be asked to live in something made out of it.