Completion processes are like finishing a puzzle when you only have part of it.
Imagine you're playing with your favorite building blocks. You see a picture on the box showing what the finished tower should look like, but you only have some of the pieces. A completion process is how you figure out which blocks go where to make the full picture.
Like Putting Together a Story
Think about reading a book. If you're trying to guess what happens next, that’s a kind of completion process too! You use clues from the story so far, like what the characters are doing or saying, to predict what might happen next. It's like being a detective who solves a mystery using hints.
How It Works in Real Life
In grown-up terms, completion processes help computers and people figure out missing information. For example, when you're typing on your phone and it suggests words as you type, that’s a kind of completion process, the phone is guessing what word you want to finish.
Just like you finish your puzzle or guess the end of the story, a completion process helps finish something that's not quite done yet!
Examples
- A child finishes a puzzle by putting the last piece in place.
- You eat the last bite of your favorite snack.
Ask a question
See also
- What are emergent properties?
- What are active agents?
- What are functional systems?
- What are irregularities?
- What are inversions?