deprecated

listen to the pronunciation of deprecated
English - English
Simple past tense and past participle of deprecate
Obsolescent; said of a construct in a computing language considered obsolete but still available for use, though planned to be phased out

A deprecated element or attribute is one that has been outdated by newer constructs.

Strongly disapproved of
Belittled; insulted
A coded character whose use is strongly discouraged Such characters are retained in the standard, but should not be used (See Definition D7a in Section 3 3, Characters and Coded Representations ) (Not the same as obsolete )
past of deprecate
Something that has been made obsolete by later versions of the API Deprecated methods should not be used because there is no guarantee that they will continue to exist in future versions
A deprecated element or attribute is one that has been outdated by newer constructs Deprecated elements are defined in the reference manual in appropriate locations, but are clearly marked as deprecated Deprecated elements may become obsolete in future versions of HTML We recommend that authors avoid using deprecated elements and attributes whenever practical To this end, we provide alternatives to them when appropriate in the specification In most cases these depend on user agent support for style sheets User agents should continue to support deprecated elements for reasons of backward compatibility
Possibly available as a feature for upward compatibility of existing applications, but not recommended for use by new applications
A deprecated element or attribute is one that was valid in earlier version of HTML but has since been replaced by other techniques These elements will eventually become obsolete but user agents are expected to still support them to ensure backwards compatibility A prominent example is the FONT tag and other presentational attributes It should be avoided and CSS used instead, but browsers will still interpret it correctly
Within the context of HTML DTDs, a deprecated term is one whose use is no longer recommended, but which is still supported for backward compatibility Go to top of page
This term is used to refer to obsolete structures that should not be used for new applications but remain valid
A method or variable that is not supported in newer versions of the JDK
As more advanced HTML standards are developed, some HTML features such as tags, elements or attributes become deprecated, meaning that other methods of accomplishing the same task are preferred Deprecated features may become obsolete in future versions of HTML, although browsers that support the features will probably continue to support them Deprecated features are included in HTML 4 0 Transitional but not HTML 4 0 Strict
{s} disliked, protested; belittled, disparaged
An HTML tag which is not in the most current HTML standard The tag has become obsolete
A deprecated element or attribute is one that has been outdated by newer constructs Deprecated elements may become obsolete in future versions of HTML Authors should avoid using deprecated elements and attributes User agents should continue to support for reasons of backward compatibility
Obsolete A language or library feature that is deprecated might be removed from the next version of the standard You should avoid using deprecated features if you can
deprecate
to pray against
deprecate
to declare something obsolescent, i.e., to recommend against a function, technique, command, etc, that still works but has been replaced
deprecate
to belittle or express disapproval of
deprecated.
discountenanced
deprecate
to express disapproval or regret for, with hope for the opposite
deprecate
{v} to pray earnestly or against
deprecate
to make obsolete (a language feature)
deprecate
{f} disapprove; protest against; belittle, disparage
deprecate
belittle; "The teacher should not deprecate his student's efforts" express strong disapproval of; deplore
deprecate
belittle; "The teacher should not deprecate his student's efforts"
deprecate
If you deprecate something, you criticize it. He deprecated the low quality of entrants to the profession. to strongly disapprove of or criticize something (deprecari , from precari )
deprecate
belittle, as in : Have you noticed that he seems to deprecate himself just so we have to compliment him?
deprecate
To express earnest disapproval of This term is used to refer to obsolete structures that ought not to be used but remain valid
deprecate
to express disapproval of
deprecate
To pray against, as an evil; to seek to avert by prayer; to desire the removal of; to seek deliverance from; to express deep regret for; to disapprove of strongly
deprecate
to discontinue
deprecate
express strong disapproval of; deplore
deprecated

    Hyphenation

    dep·re·ca·ted

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ 'de-pri-"kAt ] (transitive verb.) 1628. From Latin deprecatus, past participle of deprecari (“to pray against (a present or impending evil), pray for, intercede for (that which is in danger), rarely imprecate”) de (“off”) + precari (“to pray”).
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