Procedurenoun
A particular method for performing a task.
Procedurenoun
A series of small tasks or steps taken to accomplish an end.
Procedurenoun
(uncountable) The set of established forms or methods of an organized body for accomplishing a certain task or tasks.
Procedurenoun
The steps taken in an action or other legal proceeding.
Procedurenoun
(obsolete) That which results; issue; product.
Procedurenoun
(computing) A subroutine or function coded to perform a specific task.
Procedurenoun
(medicine) A surgical operation.
Procedurenoun
The act or manner of proceeding or moving forward; progress; process; operation; conduct.
Procedurenoun
A step taken; an act performed; a proceeding; the steps taken in an action or other legal proceeding.
Procedurenoun
That which results; issue; product.
Procedurenoun
a particular course of action intended to achieve a result;
Procedurenoun
a process or series of acts especially of a practical or mechanical nature involved in a particular form of work;
Procedurenoun
a set sequence of steps, part of larger computer program
Procedurenoun
a mode of conducting legal and parliamentary proceedings
Procedurenoun
an established or official way of doing something
Procedurenoun
a series of actions conducted in a certain order or manner
Procedurenoun
a surgical operation
Procedurenoun
another term for subroutine
Methodologynoun
The study of methods used in a field.
Methodologynoun
(proscribed) A collection of methods, practices, procedures and rules used by those who work in some field.
Methodologynoun
The implementation of such methods etc.
Methodologynoun
The science of method or arrangement; a treatise on method.
Methodologynoun
the branch of philosophy that analyzes the principles and procedures of inquiry in a particular discipline
Methodologynoun
the system of methods followed in a particular discipline
Methodologynoun
a system of methods used in a particular area of study or activity
Methodology
Methodology is .It comprises the theoretical analysis of the body of methods and principles associated with a branch of knowledge such that the methodologies employed from differing disciplines vary depending on their historical development. This creates a continuum of methodologies that stretch across competing understandings of how knowledge and reality are best understood.