İspanyolcada, değişiklikleri ve dönüşümleri göstermek için birçok farklı ifadeler vardır. - In Spanish, there are many different expressions to indicate changes and transformations.
Set of equations in relativity physics that relate the space and time coordinates of two systems moving at a constant speed relative to each other, developed in 1904 by Hendrik Antoon Lorentz. Required to describe phenomena approaching the speed of light, these transformations express the concepts that space and time are not absolute; that length, time, and mass depend on the observer's relative motion; and that the speed of light in a vacuum is constant and independent of the motion of the observer or the source
Transformation is a form of conversion in which a file is converted into a file format with a comparable structure (e g from XML to XML, or from SGML to HTML) Usually, this form of conversion can be carried out very well However, it can lead to the usual problems, since in many cases such a conversion is used to increase the quality of the files, based on the principle that 'we are at it anyway'
In prokaryotes, the natural or induced uptake and expression of a foreign DNA sequence--typically a recombinant plasmid in experimental systems In higher eukaryotes, the conversion of cultured cells to a malignant phenotype--typically through infection by a tumor virus or transfection with an oncogene (See Transformant, Transformation efficiency )
n 1 A mapping from one coordinate system onto another that preserves straight lines General transformations include all the sorts of transformations that CLIM uses, namely, translations, scaling, rotations, and reflections 2 A Lisp object that represents a transformation [annotate]
Any change in an organism which alters its general character and mode of life, as in the development of the germ into the embryo, the egg into the animal, the larva into the insect (metamorphosis), etc
A transformation takes an SGML document and transforms it into a different SGML document More than one document can be used as input or produced as output A transformation consists of three processes: the grove builder takes an SGML document as input and produces a grove;the transformer takes the constructed grove, applies the associations from the transformation specification and produces one (or more) result groves;the SGML generator verifies each result grove to see if it is valid; if this is the case, it generates an SGML document or subdocument See Also association
New Age advocates promote both personal and planetary transformation Personal transformation involves the changes wrought in one's life by increasing Self-realization As more and more people are personally transformed, the planet too will be transformed into a global brotherhood
A "transformation" is a process that changes a document or object into another, equivalent, object according to a discrete set of rules This includes conversion tools, software that allows the author to change the DTD defined for the original document to another DTD, and the ability to change the markup of lists and convert them into tables
1 A mapping from one coordinate system onto another that preserves straight lines, such as a translation, scaling, rotation, or reflection 2 A Lisp object that represents a transformation
An alteration to a coordinate system that defines a new coordinate system Standard transformations include rotation, scaling, and translation A transformation is represented by a matrix
The creation of a force that is dominant across the full spectrum of military operations - persuasive in peace, decisive in war, preeminent in any form of conflict
The process that converts coordinates from one coordinate system to another through translation, rotation, and scaling ArcInfo supports these transformations: similarity, affine, piecewise linear, projective, NADCON datum adjustment using minimum-derived curvature transformation, and a polynomial transformation to warp grids and images
a complete change in someone or something. In mathematics, a rule for changing a geometric figure or algebraic expression into another, usually accompanied by a rule for transforming it back. In geometry and topology, a transformation (e.g., flipping horizontally or vertically, rotating, or stretching vertically or horizontally) moves each point in a figure or graph to another position. A graph also undergoes a transformation when its coordinate system is changed. For example, the equations that establish a correspondence between the rectangular and polar coordinate systems constitute a transformation. In analysis, a transformation is a procedure that changes one function into another. Of special interest in many fields of mathematics are transformations forming a group, in which any two transformations applied successively produce the same result as another transformation in the group and each transformation has an inverse transformation (which undoes it) in the group. See also group theory, integral transform, linear transformation
the act of changing in form or shape or appearance; "a photograph is a translation of a scene onto a two-dimensional surface" (genetics) modification of a cell or bacterium by the uptake and incorporation of exogenous DNA a rule describing the conversion of one syntactic structure into another related syntactic structure a qualitative change (mathematics) a function that changes the position or direction of the axes of a coordinate system
Used as part of such terms as "organizational transformation," "business trans-formation," and "military transformation," the term defines a process of change that takes the organization on entirely new path to effectiveness, involving, most often, a redefinition of the organization's basic service or product offering, strategy, goals, and objectives Transformations are distinguished from "turnarounds," which is a term used increasingly to describe incremental improvements to business process, and may not always involve a complete change in business orientation
the replacement of the variables in an algebraic expression by their values in terms of another set of variables; a mapping of one space onto another or onto itself; a function that changes the position or direction of the axes of a coordinate system
Neoplastic transformation is the conversion of normal cells into tumour cells (see below) Frequently this is the result of a genetic change (mutagenesis) and the same term is used to describe the genetic modification of bacteria for use in biotechnology See epigenetic changes, genetic toxicology, genotoxic, mutation, mutagenesis, tumour
the act of moving the ensouling entity from one nodal point to the next is called primary or essential transformation Other secondary types of transformation can bring about perceptual, cognitive, functional, and behavioral changes These secondary types of transformation can be be facilitated by psychotherapy, hypnosis and meditation techniques But the essential transformational change that occurs at the level of the ensouling entity and its vehicles is fundamental and necessary for spiritual growth Essential transformation can be brought about by transformational techniques such as bija mantra, Kriya Yoga, Nada Yoga, and Kundalini Yoga Essential transformation is also produced by Translation, or Light Immersion
(genetics) modification of a cell or bacterium by the uptake and incorporation of exogenous DNA a rule describing the conversion of one syntactic structure into another related syntactic structure a qualitative change (mathematics) a function that changes the position or direction of the axes of a coordinate system
Altering a dance sequence by changing one or more of the elements of movement (e g , maintaining the steps but changing the pathway, converting a solo to an ensemble piece); can be used as a basis for applying the creative process