| CASE | in full computer-aided software engineering Use of computers in designing sophisticated tools to aid the software engineer and to automate the software development process as much as possible. It is particularly useful where major software products are designed by teams of engineers who may not share the same physical space. CASE tools can be used for simple operations such as routine coding from an appropriately detailed design in a specific programming language, or for more complex tasks such as incorporating an expert system to enforce design rules and eliminate software defects and redundancies before the coding phase. Case Stephen Sacco Vanzetti case Scottsboro case Taff Vale case Dartmouth College case prize cases | en |
| Case | caas | en |
| case | The matters of fact or conditions involved in a suit, as distinguished from the questions of law; a suit or action at law; a cause | en |
| case | A patient under treatment; an instance of sickness or injury; as, ten cases of fever; also, the history of a disease or injury | en |
| case | To propose hypothetical cases | en |
| case | That which befalls, comes, or happens; an event; an instance; a circumstance, or all the circumstances; condition; state of things; affair; as, a strange case; a case of injustice; the case of the Indian tribes | en |
| case | One of the forms, or the inflections or changes of form, of a noun, pronoun, or adjective, which indicate its relation to other words, and in the aggregate constitute its declension; the relation which a noun or pronoun sustains to some other word | en |
| case | pack, crate, box, put in cases fiil | en |
| case | A small fissure which admits water to the workings | en |
| case | To cover or protect with, or as with, a case; to inclose | en |
| case | a portable container for carrying several objects; "the musicians left their instrument cases backstage" | en |
| case | Chance; accident; hap; opportunity | en |
| case | the actual state of things; "that was not the case" | en |
| case | the quantity contained in a case a specific state of mind that is temporary; "a case of the jitters" | en |
| case | look over, usually with the intention to rob; "They men cased the housed | en |
| case | A shallow tray divided into compartments or "boxes" for holding type | en |
| case | a person requiring professional services; "a typical case was the suburban housewife described by a marriage counselor" | en |
| case | an occurrence of something; "it was a case of bad judgment"; "another instance occurred yesterday"; "but there is always the famous example of the Smiths" | en |
| case | An inclosing frame; a casing; as, a door case; a window case | en |
| case | nouns or pronouns or adjectives (often marked by inflection) related in some way to other words in a sentence a statement of facts and reasons used to support an argument; "he stated his case clearly" | en |
| case | a problem requiring investigation; "Perry Mason solved the case of the missing heir" | en |
| case | a glass container used to store and display items in a shop or museum or home bed linen consisting of a cover for a pillow; "the burglar carried his loot in a pillowcase" | en |
| case | A shallow tray divided into compartments or "boxes" | en |
| case | One of several similar instances or events which are being studied and compared | en |
| case | A legal proceeding, lawsuit | en |
| case | In typography, the nature of a piece of alphabetic type, whether a "capital" (upper case) or "small" (lower case) letter | en |
| case | four of a kind | en |
| case | The outer covering or framework of a piece of apparatus such as a computer | en |
| case | Ambiguous | en |
| case | To place (an item or items of manufacture) into a box, as in preparation for shipment | en |
| case | : To survey (a building or other location) surreptitiously, as in preparation for a robbery | en |
| case | A set of grammatical cases or their meanings in a particular language collectively | en |
| case | An instance of grammatical case; a category of nouns, pronouns, or adjectives, specialized (usually by inflection) to indicate a particular syntactic relation to other words in a sentence | en |
| case | A box, sheath, or covering; as, a case for holding goods; a case for spectacles; the case of a watch; the case (capsule) of a cartridge; a case (cover) for a book | en |
| case | A box and its contents; the quantity contained in a box; as, a case of goods; a case of instruments | en |
| case | a portable container for carrying several objects; "the musicians left their instrument cases backstage" a glass container used to store and display items in a shop or museum or home bed linen consisting of a cover for a pillow; "the burglar carried his loot in a pillowcase" the actual state of things; "that was not the case" nouns or pronouns or adjectives (often marked by inflection) related in some way to other words in a sentence a statement of facts and reasons used to support an argument; "he stated his case clearly" a problem requiring investigation; "Perry Mason solved the case of the missing heir" an occurrence of something; "it was a case of bad judgment"; "another instance occurred yesterday"; "but there is always the famous example of the Smiths" a person requiring professional services; "a typical case was the suburban housewife described by a marriage counselor" the quantity contained in a case a specific state of mind that is temporary; "a case of the jitters" look over, usually with the intention to rob; "They men cased the housed | en |
| case | The last remaining card of a particular rank | en |
| case | A box that contains or can contain a number of identical items of manufacture | en |
| case | A suitcase | en |
| case | A piece of luggage that can be used to transport an apparatus such as a sewing machine | en |
| case | A piece of furniture, constructed partially of transparent glass or plastic, within which items can be displayed | en |
| case | for holding type | en |
| case | To strip the skin from; as, to case a box | en |
| case | bed linen consisting of a cover for a pillow; "the burglar carried his loot in a pillowcase" | en |
| case | the enclosing frame around a door or window opening; "the casings had rotted away and had to be replaced" | en |
| case | an enveloping structure or covering enclosing an animal or plant organ or part | en |
| case | a person of a specified kind (usually with many eccentricities); "a real character"; "a strange character"; "a friendly eccentric"; "the capable type"; "a mental case" | en |
| case | look over, usually with the intention to rob; "They men cased the housed" | en |
| case | enclose in, or as if in, a case; "my feet were encased in mud" | en |
| case | The covers of a hardbound book | en |
| case | Covers and spine that, as a unit, enclose the pages of a casebound book | en |
| case | The stiff covers of a hardbound book | en |
| case | the housing or outer covering of something; "the clock has a walnut case" | en |
| case | nouns or pronouns or adjectives (often marked by inflection) related in some way to other words in a sentence | en |
| case | a special set of circumstances; "in that event, the first possibility is excluded"; "it may rain in which case the picnic will be canceled" | en |
| case | A specific set of symptoms and the related solution | en |
| case | occasion; matter; legal case; situation; argument; category of inflection (Grammar); box, container; (Computers) metal box that houses the internal components of a computer isim | en |
| case | a comprehensive term for any proceeding in a court of law whereby an individual seeks a legal remedy; "the family brought suit against the landlord" | en |
| case | a statement of facts and reasons used to support an argument; "he stated his case clearly" | en |
| case | a person who is subjected to experimental or other observational procedures; someone who is an object of investigation; "the subjects for this investigation were selected randomly"; "the cases that we studied were drawn from two different communities" | en |
| case | a specific state of mind that is temporary; "a case of the jitters" | en |
| case | a glass container used to store and display items in a shop or museum or home | en |
| case | the quantity contained in a case | en |
| case | The covers of a hard-bound, or case-bound, book | en |
| case | The cover of a case bound or hard cover book, made up of a front and back cover board, a piece of material to support the spine, and the cover cloth or paper | en |
| case | A record of a problem reported by a client and the solution path A case can be generated either by a client who uses Casetracker Web or the Casetracker E-mail Interface to report it, or by a consultant who as had contact with a client either in person or on the phone | en |
| case | a wooden drawer partitioned into many small boxes, used to store the separate type characters The cases are held in a frame or rack, often with a bracket on the top to allow two cases (eg an upper and lower) to be held open one above the other, and in front of which the compositor stands whilst setting the job Some cases have no internal partitions, and are used to store wood letter (or blocks, dingbats, etc ) Over 200 different styles of case are shown here, but there are many others | en |
| case | Computer-Aided Software Engineering (CASE) is a collection of tools and techniques that promise revolutionary gains in analyst and programmer productivity The two prominent delivered technologies are application generators and PC-based workstations that provide graphics-oriented automation of the development process | en |
| case | (Computer-Aided Software Engineering) The industrialization of software engineering techniques and computer technology to improve and automate the practice of information systems development | en |
| case | a general term for a person being treated or helped It also refers to his condition, which is monitored by the content of his reactive mind A persons case is the way he responds to the world around him by reason of his aberrations | en |
| case | An individual who is ill following ingestion of food Outbreak cases reported by CDC are determined to be contaminated on the basis of laboratory analysis and/or epidemiological evidence Not all outbreak cases need be confirmed by laboratory analysis if there is sufficient epidemiological evidence linking them to the outbreak | en |
| case | The fourth card of a particular rank I knew he was bluffing because I had folded the case 7 | en |
| case | Covers and spine that, as a unit, enclose the pages of a case-bound book | en |
| case | That portion of a ferrous alloy, extending inward from the surface, whose composition has been altered so that it can be case hardened Typically considered to be the portion of the alloy (a) whose composition had been measurably altered from the original composition, (b) that appears dark on an etched cross section, or (c) that has a hardness, after hardening, equal to or greater than a specified value Contrast with core | en |
| case | an inflectional form of a noun, pronoun, or adjective indicating its grammatical relation to other words Neither English nor Welsh has cases for nouns or adjectives English has cases for pronouns: I/me/my, he/him/his, she/her/her, you/you/your and they/them/their are the subjective, objective, and possessive cases, respectively | en |
| case | n (of a character) the property of being either uppercase or lowercase Not all characters have case {"The characters #\A and #\a have case, but the character #\$ has no case "} See section Characters With Case and the function both-case-p | en |
| case | The covers of a hardbound book, consisting of paper or cloth over binder boards to top | en |
| case | (1) Feature of certain alphabets where the letters have two distinct forms These variants, which may differ markedly in shape and size, are called the uppercase letter (also known as capital or majuscule) and the lowercase letter (also known as small or minuscule) (2) Normative property of characters, consisting of uppercase, lowercase, and titlecase (Lu, Ll, and Lt) (See Section 4 1, Case--Normative ) | en |
| case | In bookbinding, the covers of a hard bound book | en |
| case | The last card of a certain rank in the deck Example: "The flop came J-8-3; I've got pocket jacks, he's got pocket 8's, and then the case eight falls on the river and he beats my full house " | en |
| case | A case consists of measurements on variables for an individual subject or experimental unit For example, you might take many measurements on a single person: variables such as height, weight, gender, etc The individual person's measurements on all the variables represents a case Measurement on a single variable is called an observation Sometimes the term case and observation are used interchangeably But, strictly speaking, a case represents one computer record, or one row of data in a spreadsheet, for an individual experimental unit Each individual case (or person in this example) will have a row of data contained in the data file The data file will have n rows of data, where n is the number of cases | en |
| case | Covers and spine that, as a unit, enclose the pages of a case bound book | en |
| case | A Java(TM) programming language keyword that defines a group of statements to begin executing if a value specified matches the value defined by a preceding "switch" keyword | en |
| case | In epidemiology, a countable instance in the population or study group of a particular disease, health disorder, or condition under investigation Sometimes, an individual with the particular disease | en |
| cased | having a case or covering; encased or clad | en |
| cased | enclosed in or protected with a case sıfat | en |
| cased | enclosed in a case covered or protected with or as if with a case; "knights cased in steel"; "products encased in leatherette | en |
| cased | enclosed in a case | en |
| cased | covered or protected with or as if with a case; "knights cased in steel"; "products encased in leatherette" | en |
| cases | plural of case | en |
| cases | third-person singular of case | en |
| cases | Cases are available for all popular phones The cases provide protection for the phone, and typically also feature carrying straps The most common material for cases is cowhide genuine leather | en |
| cases | Cases are available for all popular cell phones Cases protect the cell phone, and make carrying your phone easier Cell phone cases are usually either cowhide leather, vinyl, or R F reflective material to protect your melon | en |
| cases | The case of a watch must not only protect the mechanism and hold all the parts together but it must also look good -sometimes to the extent of making a timepiece into a piece of jewellery A watch case is generally in 3 parts -the bezel, which holds the crystal, -the band or centrepart, which contains the movement, -and the back, either snapped or screwed on, in to which, sometimes, is fitted a crystal so that an intricate mechanical movement watch | en |
| cases | General term for an action, cause, suit, or controversy, at law or in equity; questions contested before a court of justice | en |
| cases | General term for an action, cause, suit or controversy, at law or in equity | en |
| cases | To Read a Case | en |
| cases | RC Carpet-covered plywood Surface mounted hardware Available in gray or black | en |
| cases | All surgical operations, whether major or minor, inpatient or outpatient, performed in the operating room(s) | en |
| casing | Pipe cemented in the well to seal off formation fluids or keep the hole from caving in | en |
| casing | steel pipe placed in a wellbore as drilling progresses to prevent the wall of the hole from caving in during drilling, to provide protection for subsequent casing or tubing strings and to provide a means of extracting petroleum if the well is productive | en |
| casing | Casing is the structural retainer for the walls of oil and gas wells and accounts for 75% (by weight) of OCTG shipments Casing is used to prevent contamination of both the surrounding water table and the well itself Casing lasts the life of a well and is not usually removed when a well is closed | en |
| casing | Decorative Wood Trim usually between 2-4 wide It goes around doors and windows on the inside of a house | en |
| casing | Wooden trim that surrounds the perimeter of the exterior and interior of a window or door Casings come in a variety of profile | en |
| casing | Steel pipe set in a well to prevent the hole from sloughing or caving and to enable formations to be isolated (there may be several strings of casing in a well, one inside the other) | en |
| casing | A type of moulding used to cover the small space between a door jamb or window frame and the adjacent wall | en |
| casing | Tubes or pipes used in boreholes to keep them from caving in Usually made in pieces of ten feet lengths that screw together | en |
| casing | The structural steel retainer for the walls of oil and gas wells, and accounts for 75% (by weight) of the shipments of all oil country tubular goods (see OCTG) Casing is used to prevent contamination of both the surrounding water table and the well itself Casing lasts the life of a well and is not usually removed when a well is closed | en |
| casing | Molding used as framing around a window or door Also referred to as Trim | en |
| casing | The application of a layer of glass over a layer of contrasting color The gaffer either gathers one layer over another gather, or inflates a gob of hot glass inside a pr eformed blank of another color The two components adhere and are inflated together (perhaps with frequent reheating) until they have the desired form Sometimes, the upper layer is carved, cut, or acid-etched to produce cameo glass | en |
| casing | Casing is the structural retainer for the walls of oil and gas wells, and accounts for 75% (by weight) of OCTG shipments Casing is used to prevent contamination of both the surrounding water table and the well itself Casing lasts the life of a well and is not usually removed when a well is closed | en |
| casing | A trim Exposed molding or framing around a window or door, on either the inside or outside, to cover the space between the window frame or jamb and the wall | en |
| casing | Molding of various widths and thicknesses used to trim door and window openings at the jambs | en |
| casing | A casing is a substance or object that covers something and protects it. the outer casings of missiles. an outer layer of metal, rubber etc that covers and protects something such as a wire or tyre | en |
| casing | protective covering; frame; cover isim | en |
| casing | Trim moulding applied around interior and exterior window and door openings to cover the gap between the frame or jamb an the wall | en |
| casing | Exposed molding or framing around a window or door, on either the inside or outside, to cover the space between the window frame or jamb and the wall | en |
| casing | (AKA brickmould or trim) Moulding around window and door frames that serve as a finishing boundary, either on the interior of the window or door | en |
| casing | Steel pipe cemented in place in an oil or gas well as the drilling progresses or when the well is completed The casing serves several purposes: (1) to prevent the formation walls from caving or squeezing into the hole during drilling; (2) to protect one formation from damage when heavy mud weights are required in drilling another; (3) to provide a means to isolate porous and permeable formations from one another at the wellbore; (4) to prevent contamination of shallow aquifers by drilling muds See also casing string | en |
| casing | (AKA brickmould or trim) Moulding around window and door frames that serve as a finishing boundary, usually on the interior of the window or door (learn more) Trim around the exterior of windows and doors is usually called brickmould | en |
| casing | Steel pipe used in oil wells to seal off fluids in the rocks from the bore hole and to prevent the walls of the hole from caving | en |
| casing | A paper cover that protects the charges of a model rocket engine and confines the internal pressure during combustion allowing the exhaust gas to escape through the nozzle | en |