Instead testability is an extrinsic property which results from interdependency of the software to be tested and the test goals, test methods used, and test resources ( i . e ., the test context ).
12.
Major shifts in intrinsic and extrinsic properties of organisms, including morphology and behavior in relation to other organisms or shifts in the global environment, can cause secular or long-term cyclic changes in preservation ( megabias ).
13.
Given such a distinction, it is possible to define " real " change by requiring that the predicate involved express an intrinsic property, like being 175 cm tall, rather than an extrinsic property, like being taller than B.
14.
A one-kilogram mass is still a one-kilogram mass ( as mass is an extrinsic property of the object ) but the downward force due to gravity, and therefore its weight, is only one-sixth of what the object would have on Earth.
15.
In topology and geometry, surfaces and curves were thought of for a long time as subsets of some Euclidean space; moving to an abstract definition of a manifold allows us to distinguish between intrinsic properties of a manifold ( like dimension, lengths, or angles ) and extrinsic properties that depend upon the way the manifold is embedded into Euclidean space.