| transformative | having the power to transform; with a tendency to transform | en | (sıfat) | en |
| transformative | Having power, or a tendency, to transform | en | en |
| transform | change, convert, become, transmute, metamorphose | en | (fiil) | en |
| transform | To change the form of; to change in shape or appearance; to metamorphose; as, a caterpillar is ultimately transformed into a butterfly | en | en |
| transform | To change into another substance; to transmute; as, the alchemists sought to transform lead into gold | en | en |
| transform | To change in nature, disposition, heart, character, or the like; to convert | en | en |
| transform | To change, as an algebraic expression or geometrical figure, into another from without altering its value | en | en |
| transform | To be changed in form; to be metamorphosed | en | en |
| transform | change in outward structure or looks; "He transformed into a monster"; "The salesman metamorphosed into an ugly beetle" | en | en |
| transform | increase or decrease (an alternating current or voltage) change (a bacterial cell) into a genetically distinct cell by the introduction of DNA from another cell of the same or closely related species convert (one form of energy) to another; "transform energy to light" | en | en |
| transform | change or alter in form, appearance, or nature; "This experience transformed her completely"; "She transformed the clay into a beautiful sculpture"; "transubstantiate one element into another" | en | en |
| transform | subject to a mathematical transformation | en | en |
| transform | change in outward structure or looks; "He transformed into a monster"; "The salesman metamorphosed into an ugly beetle" increase or decrease (an alternating current or voltage) change (a bacterial cell) into a genetically distinct cell by the introduction of DNA from another cell of the same or closely related species convert (one form of energy) to another; "transform energy to light" change or alter in form, appearance, or nature; "This experience transformed her completely"; "She transformed the clay into a beautiful sculpture"; "transubstantiate one element into another" subject to a mathematical transformation | en | en |
| transform | To transform something into something else means to change or convert it into that thing. Your metabolic rate is the speed at which your body transforms food into energy Delegates also discussed transforming them from a guerrilla force into a regular army. + transformation transformations trans·for·ma·tion Norah made plans for the transformation of an attic room into a study Chemical transformations occur | en | en |
| transform | To transform something or someone means to change them completely and suddenly so that they are much better or more attractive. The Minister said the Urban Development Corporation was now transforming the area He said she had transformed him from a hard-drinking womaniser into a devoted husband and father. + transformation trans·for·ma·tion In the last five years he's undergone a personal transformation. to completely change the appearance, form, or character of something or someone, especially in a way that improves it (transformare, from formare ). v. Fourier transform integral transform Laplace transform | en | en |
| transform | A Transform object | en | en |
| transform | Short for transformation A sequence of translations (movements), scalings, and rotations applied to an object or set of objects In Radiance, only regular transformations are allowed, since skewing and anisotropic scaling would fundamentally change the nature of certain surface primitives World coordinate unit changes are implemented as simple scaling transforms | en | en |
| transform | A transform is a mathematical operation that converts a function from one domain to another domain with no loss of information For example, the Fourier transform converts a function of time into a function of frequency | en | en |
| transform | The process of converting coordinates (map or image) from one coordinate system to another This involves scaling, rotation, translation, and warping (images) (ESRI, 1994) | en | en |
| transform | The transform engine converts 3D data from one frame of reference to a new frame of reference The system must transform the data to the current view before performing the following steps (lighting, triangle setup and rendering) Every object that is displayed and some objects that are not displayed must be transformed every time the scene is redrawn | en | en |
| transform | (1) In microbiology and genetics the modification of one genotype by the external application of DNA from a cell of another genotype (2)In oncology (the study of cancer formation) the conversion of a normal cell into a cancerous one by mutation or transfection | en | en |
| transform | Windows Installer MST file that temporarily modifies the behavior of the package (MSI file) to customize Microsoft Project 2000 installation Created to modify or restrict Microsoft Project 2000 Setup from an administrative installation point See also: package | en | en |
| transform | to change the nature, condition, or function of; to convert | en | en |
| transform | A reversible transformation of a signal/vector/function in into some other coordinate system | en | en |
| transform | The processing of a octet stream from source content to derived content Typical transforms include XML Canonicalization, XPath, and XSLT | en | en |
| transform | A color-space exchange from one system (RGB to CMYK) to another, or changing from one hue base to another | en | en |
| transform | An algorithm which takes an image, alters it, and outputs a new image Sometimes written as 'xform' See also Point transform, Neighborhood transform, and Geometric transform | en | en |
| transform | Each Group in the scene graph stores a transform This is a matrix which embodies the position, orientation and scale of the node in the scene graph relative to its parent P02 | en | en |
| transform | Groups nodes together under a single coordinate system, or "frame of reference"; incorporates the fields of the VRML 1 0 Separator and Transform nodes HTML version of Basic Foils prepared April 6 1997 Foil 14 New Node Types - Browser Information - III From VRML 2 Basic Concepts and Definitions CPS616 -- Information Track of CPS -- Spring Semester 97 * Full HTML Index | en | en |
| transform | Plates slide past each other Shear stress Associated with Strike-Slip-Faults | en | en |
| transform | A process to change or convert For example, a simple moving average is a filter to reduce noise; the moving average is the transform function | en | en |
| transform | A transform lists a security protocol (AH or ESP) with its corresponding algorithms For example, one transform is the AH protocol with the HMAC-MD5 authentication algorithm | en | en |
| transform | a fault that has a slip/side motion | en | en |
| transform | When plates of the Earth slide sideways past each other | en | en |
| transform | If this Pokémon is your Active Pokémon, treat it as if it were the same card as the Defending Pokémon, including type, Hit Points, Weakness, and so on, except this Pokémon can't evolve, always has this Pokémon Power, and you may treat any Energy attached to this Pokémon as Energy of any type This Pokémon isn't a copy of any other Pokémon while this Pokémon is Asleep, Confused, or Paralyzed Pokémon with this Power: Ditto | en | en |
| transform | A transform describes a security protocol (AH or ESP) with its corresponding algorithms For example, ESP with the DES cipher algorithm and HMAC variant-SHA for authentication | en | en |
| transform | To give an object special visual effects such as scaling, skewing, and rotating | en | en |
| transform | change from one form or medium into another; "Braque translated collage into oil" | en | en |
| transform | convert (one form of energy) to another; "transform energy to light" | en | en |
| transform | change (a bacterial cell) into a genetically distinct cell by the introduction of DNA from another cell of the same or closely related species | en | en |
| transform | increase or decrease (an alternating current or voltage) | en | en |