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proporties

Proporties is commonly used misspelling of properties, a general term for attributes or characteristics of something. In most contexts, a property is a describable quality that can be used to classify, compare, or quantify objects or systems. Properties can be qualitative (color, texture) or quantitative (mass, temperature), and may be intrinsic (inherent to the object) or extrinsic (dependent on context).

In mathematics and logic, properties refer to attributes of objects, functions, or structures: e.g., evenness of

Physics and chemistry differentiate physical properties (observed without changing composition: density, phase, boiling point) from chemical

Computing uses properties as attributes of data objects (properties of a class or fields in a record).

Philosophical use sees properties as predicates or universals that objects instantiate; debates distinguish properties from relations

integers,
symmetry
of
a
shape,
or
the
commutativity
of
addition.
properties
(reactivity,
oxidation
state).
Intensive
properties
do
not
depend
on
size;
extensive
properties
do
(mass,
volume).
In
databases,
properties
equate
to
fields
or
columns;
in
user
interfaces,
property
panels
show
object
attributes.
or
tropes.