- (method) a way of doing something, especially a systematic way; implies an orderly logical arrangement (usually in steps)
- method acting: an acting technique introduced by Stanislavsky in which the actor recalls emotions or reactions from his or her own life and uses them to identify with the character being portrayed
- (A Method) Return to Cookie Mountain is the third full-length album by the American rock group TV on the Radio.
- (Method (film)) Method is a 2004 film about a cast and crew who are in Romania to make a film about serial killer Belle Gunness. During filming the lead actress (Elizabeth Hurley), tries to get deeply into character since the film is very important to her career. ...
- (Method (music)) In music, a method is a kind of textbook for a specified musical instrument or a selected problem of playing a certain instrument.
- (Method (musician, Godhead)) Ullrich Hepperlin, known as Method, or the Method, is the programmer, bassist and keyboard player for the industrial rock band Godhead. He is also a prominent solo songwriter, remixer and producer as well as a nationally recognized graphic designer and web designer.
- (Method (oo)) In object-oriented programming, a method is a subroutine that is exclusively associated either with a class (in which case it is called a class method or a static method) or with an object (in which case it is an instance method). ...
- (Method (patent)) In United States patent law, a method is a '''''', or series of steps or acts, for performing a function or accomplishing a result. ...
- (method) A process by which a task is completed; a way of doing something; A type of theatrical acting wherein the actor utilizes his personal emotions from personal experience to portray a scripted scene; In object-oriented languages, a subroutine or function belonging to a class or object; ...
- (Method) is the underlying move(s) in which a block or strike can be executed. There are only two basic methods with which to execute a move--linear (straight) and circular (curved). All others are variations of these two. ...
- (method) A kind of action that an object can take if you tell it to. See perlobj.
- (method) the right: ñāya, is a name for the 8-fold path (s. magga)
- (method) A reasonably complete set of rules and criteria that establish a precise and repeatable way of performing a task and arriving at a desired
- (Method) An object's abilities. Lassie, being a Dog, has the ability to bark. So bark() is one of Lassie's methods. She may have other methods as well, for example sit() or eat() or walk(). ...
- (method) The executable code that implements the logic of a particular message for a class. The are two types of method: class method and instance method.
- (method) Similar to functions and procedures in other languages. Methods implement the behavior for objects.
- (method) A function defined inside a class. Objects of that class are manipulated by invoking their methods.
- (method) A function that is a property of an object. Since functions themselves are objects, a method is actually an object reference to a function.
- (Method) Member in a class that does some processing (e.g., like a subroutine or function in other languages).
- A method is an instruction. The methods available for each object describe what you can do with the object. For example, using a method, you can convert text in an object to all uppercase or all lowercase letters. ...
- (Method) Functions attached to objects. Also known as messages.
- (method) The operations of a class are stored as methods. A method, similar to a function in a procedural language like C, represents an action an object takes, or an operation the class performs.
- (METHOD) Is the tool or instrument one uses to measure crime (or height). One method might be to go to the police department and go through all of their files. ...
- (Method (ACF/VTAM)) An IBM licensed program that controls communications and flow of data in an SNA network. It provides single-domain, multiple-domain, and interconnected network capability.
- (Method (n)) A way of acting, rooted in the subconscious, which will determine how you think and feel