Repertoire in a sentence as a noun

All this information also makes it much easier to re-skill or add new skills to my repertoire.

Eventually, everything will start making sense and you'll just add to your repertoire as the needs arise.

Good examples like these aren't very well curated from the universal Haskell repertoire.

But if you do this for enough billionaires, the common elements in the problem will start repeating and the researchers will learn a repertoire of common hacks.

Learning other languages can broaden your repertoire in a similar way. Why is it more important to decompose problems into map/fold/filter/scan than other sets of operations?

Facebook fails both these checks, there aren't many more users for them to acquire and it seems they've already tried everything in their repertoire to milk each user.

"Yup, another great interview question for your repertoire to weed people out and talk about the kinds of things that come up in the day to day of being a modern software engineer.

The site is the avocation of someone pseudonymous who tracks these things down meticulously and has been building up a sizeable repertoire.

Here is a link to the actual research article, "Enhanced repertoire of brain dynamical states during the psychedelic experience.

If you are already disagreeing with me, then anything I say here won't change your mind, because you've already heard the arguments before and built up a repertoire of responses.

So that may not be an accurate analogy, given that writing on the fly isn't part of the programming repertoire - most programmers are allowed to think before they write anything down.

Most data scientists I've met tend to accumulate a repertoire of tools from different fields, rather that side with either Machine Learning or Statistical communities.

Kahneman and Tversky concluded that "the notion that sampling variance decreases in proportion to sample size is apparently not part of man's repertoire of intuitions.

Yet, part of the fun of working on a simpler system is that you can write a piece of code and know that it is very close to optimal -- maybe you could rewrite the whole thing and save a few bytes or a few cycles, but you still feel like you've put your repertoire of tricks to good use and made something that you would be feel reasonably comfortable showing off to the experts.

Repertoire definitions

noun

the entire range of skills or aptitudes or devices used in a particular field or occupation; "the repertory of the supposed feats of mesmerism"; "has a large repertory of dialects and characters"

See also: repertory

noun

a collection of works (plays, songs, operas, ballets) that an artist or company can perform and do perform for short intervals on a regular schedule

See also: repertory