Capstone Glossary¶
Glossary Fit¶
flowchart TD
directory["This directory"] --> glossary["Glossary"]
glossary --> terms["Stable local terms"]
terms --> reading["Reading and examples"]
terms --> practice["Exercises and review"]
terms --> proof["Capstone proof and discussion"]
flowchart TD
pressure["Hit an unfamiliar term"] --> lookup["Open the glossary entry"]
lookup --> confirm["Match the term to the local meaning"]
confirm --> return["Return to the lesson or guide"]
return --> reuse["Reuse the same wording in notes, code review, and proof"]
This glossary belongs to Capstone in Python Object-Oriented Programming. It keeps the language of this directory stable so the same ideas keep the same names across reading, practice, review, and capstone proof.
How to use this glossary¶
Read the directory index first, then return here whenever a page, command, or review discussion starts to feel more vague than the course intends. The goal is stable language, not extra theory.
Terms in this directory¶
| Term | Meaning in this directory |
|---|---|
| Capstone Architecture Guide | the capstone reading surface for capstone architecture guide, used to choose the next repository entry point without guessing. |
| Capstone File Guide | the capstone reading surface for capstone file guide, used to choose the next repository entry point without guessing. |
| Capstone Map | the capstone reading surface for capstone map, used to choose the next repository entry point without guessing. |
| Capstone Proof Guide | the capstone review surface for capstone proof guide, used to turn course ideas into inspection, evidence, and change decisions. |
| Capstone Review Checklist | the capstone review surface for capstone review checklist, used to turn course ideas into inspection, evidence, and change decisions. |
| Capstone Walkthrough | the capstone reading surface for capstone walkthrough, used to choose the next repository entry point without guessing. |
| Command Guide | the executable entry surface for the capstone, used when the next question is best answered by running the project rather than rereading the course. |