An entry that is "under" a parent entry. For example, a parent entry that represents a department of a company may have child entries representing the employees in that department. Parent-child relationships are described by distinguished names. A child's distinguished name is created by adding something on the front of the parent's.
Offspring of parentage; progeny.
One of the subnodes of a Parent. A child node does not have knowledge of its parent node. The user must keep track of this relationship.
In HTML, an element A is called the child of element B if an only if B is the parent of A.
A son or daughter who is under 18 years old or is 18 years or older and is incapable of self-care because of a mental or physical disability (whether permanent or temporary) and is: a biological, adopted or foster child or step-child (a child of an employee's spouse from a previous marriage); a legal ward (a minor child placed by the court under the care of an employee as guardian); a child of an employee to whom an employee is in the place of a parent ( in loco parentis).
An object that is linked to a parent object.
A relationship that holds between objects. If "A" and "B" are objects, then B is a child of A provided that when B was created, A was specified as being its parent (either in the fourth argument of an NhlCreate call, or in a NCL create expression), or B was made a child of A by using the NhlChangeWorkstation function. If B is a child of A, then the following conditions apply: B inherits the resource database of A. If viewable, B will display to the same workstation as A; if A is a workstation, then B will draw to A. Destroying A will destroy B. Resources can be specified in resource files as: {App obj name} . {parent of A} . {Name of A} . {Name of B} . {resource of B} : {value}. A child can have only one parent. See also parent.
A computer that gets configuration information from the shared directory domain of a parent.
Children A child of a vertex (called the parent) is an adjacent vertex one level lower on the tree. See tree.
a bundle of joys for parents
a divine blessing and is a great asset for the parents
a frighteningly malleable thing, and in so many ways utterly at the mercy of their parents
a human person of equal dignity to the parents and cannot be considered as an object to be desired and possessed
a joy for the parents who delight in teaching it and a source of stress for everyone else
a member that has a parent above it
a member with a parent above it
an angel on earth, dancing with its parents to the pure, simple music of nature
a page that is pointed to from the parent, and which links back to the parent
a person, and not a subperson over whom the parent has an absolute possessory interest
a precious gift and merely because he or she for various reasons is abandoned by the parents that cannot be a reason for further neglect by the society
a product of both parents and the importance of the Moon, even over the Sun in the determination of fortune is a well established aspect of Vedic Astrology
a real economic boon to the homestead, and he will not merely enrich the lives of his parents metaphorically, but also he can be expected to enrich the homestead materially before he leaves it
a reflection of not only the parents but as well society
a reflection of their parents
a resident of the county in which he/she resides with the natural or legally adoptive parent or legal guardian on a permanent basis
a selfish being, which has evolved to exploit the parental generation and milk it for all it can get
a sponge for many years, what they soaks up in experience depends very largely on their parents
a trust in the care of his parents, for his pure heart is a precious uncut jewel devoid of any form or carving, which will accept being cut into any shape, and will be disposed according to the guidance it receives from others
a trust in the care of its parents
a trust in the hands of his parents
Node that is a subset of the parent node
Any viewport in the viewport hierarchy that has a parent.
relationship indicating a smaller, narrower subproject of a larger, broader project (the parent). See also Relationships
A person who has not reached the age of 18 years. In law a person becomes an adult on their 18th birthday. A child’s claim must be conducted through a litigation guardian (usually a parent or legal guardian) and settlement must be sanctioned by the public trustee.
A node on a tree linked to another, higher-level node (referred to as the parent). A node can be a child and a parent at the same time depending on its location within the tree.
A person aged 0-14 (at the time of the 1996 or 2001 Household Disability Survey or at the time of the 1997 or 2001 Disability Survey of Residential Facilities). Different survey screening questionnaires and content questionnaires were used for children and adults. Parents or caregivers usually answered survey questions on their children's behalf.
node, leaf, branch A child object or node is any object that is subordinate to another object or container. Parent/child relationships are exposed to users in HGrid and Tree controls, or via drill down. Yes, when describing hierarchical relationships. Otherwise refer to the object type or use the term "object". HGrid Templates, Tree
something that is created by, contained in, or owned by a parent, in some sense. For example a child window typically means a window that is inside another window (its parent), a child application is one that was launched by a parent application. In programming, the concept of parent-child relationships means that each entity has at most one parent, but a parent may have any number of children.
A widget that is contained within another "parent" widget.
A person of any age who is a natural, step or foster son or daughter of a couple or lone parent, usually resident in the same household, and who does not have a child or partner of their own usually resident in the household.
A value at the level under a given value in a hierarchy. For example, in a Time dimension, the value Jan-99 might be the child of the value Q1-99. A value can be a child for more than one parent if the child value belongs to multiple hierarchies. See Also: hierarchy level parent
package or subprogram which acts as an extension of a parent package, thus allowing packages to be extended without modifying the original specifications.
Support - Money paid by one parent to the other parent to cover expenses of raising one's child.
A subclass of a class (its parent class); it inherits public (and protected) data and methods from the parent class.
Objects can be linked to each other in hierarchical groups. The Parent Object in such groups passes its transformations through to the Child Objects. See Also: Parent.
Data or an element that is related to another object but lower in hierarchical level than the related (parent) object. An Access subform is related to an Access form. The Link Child Fields property indicates the field that links the Child to the master (Parent) form (which is related to the Link Master Fields property field).
Includes both the offspring of a parent and legally adopted children.
Any nested tag: parent child / /parent
A person seventeen years of age or younger, and under parental control. See: Assistance Units - Food Assistance
The dependant side of a hierarchical relationship. A child is a node in a hierarchical structure that has another node above it (closer to the root). See also child-alias, parent-child relationship, parent.
In a rooted tree, a vertex v is a child of vertex w if v immediately succeeds w on the path from the root to v. Vertex v is a child of w if and only if w is the parent of v.
Is or refers to a process, frame, class or window that has been spawned by a parent window, frame, class or process.
an entity, such as a child object or child process, which is created or controlled by a parent.
Generally, an unmarried person under 21 years of age who is: a child born in wedlock; a stepchild, provided that the child was under 18 years of age at the time that the marriage creating the stepchild relationship occurred; a legitimated child, provided that the child was legitimated while in the legal custody of the legitimating parent; a child born out of wedlock, when a benefit is sought on the basis of its relationship with its mother, or to its father if the father has or had a bona fide relationship with the child; a child adopted while under 16 years of age who has resided since adoption in the legal custody of the adopting parents for at least 2 years; or an orphan, under 16 years of age, who has been adopted abroad by a U.S. citizen or has an immediate-relative visa petition submitted in his/her behalf and is coming to the United States for adoption by a U.S. citizen.
(plural: children) A young human. Depending on context it may mean someone who is not yet an adult, or someone who has not yet reached puberty (someone who is prepubescent). Child is also a counterpart of parent: adults are the children of their parents despite their maturation beyond infancy; for example "Benjamin, aged 46, is the child of Tobias, aged 73".