Unbounded in a sentence as an adjective

This would allow memory to grow unbounded. As a result Rails stores all user hash keys as strings.

I can think of unbounded examples of this. Sunil Tripathi is the first to spring to mind.

None do it because it would expose them to unbounded liability. No, no, no.

Waits for withdraws stretched from weeks to months to unbounded. During this time, they routinely transferred out Bitcoins in minutes.

It does not seem reasonable for a tiny startup to accept an unbounded downside risk just for PR purposes. The refund they're offering is fine.

But in the meantime we mere humans don't appear to me to have infinitely unbounded energy desires.

1 GC that causes unbounded memory growth, and that the new GC does typically result in higher memory use. The memory issue isn't really that serious, as it seems to be a tradeoff for performance.

It might not be true, but remember, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence and this is a case where risk really is unbounded, so you better be cautious.

, and that every function implicitly returns a new World value with unbounded changes made to it. Functional programming removes this implicit passing of the World value, and replaces it with an explicit version.

The troubling aspect of Glass is that it introduces an asymmetry that I feel is to my disadvantage: if someone observes me with Glass, access to that observation is potentially unbounded. This feels to me like a loss of control, and that's why Glass makes me uncomfortable.

We can get new features and unbounded direct connectivity with overlay networks. We have only the most basic level of experience with overlays --- BitTorrent, Skype --- but the experience we've had seems to indicate that if you have a problem users care about, overlays tend to solve them nicely.

This was how the first known transcendental numbers -- the Liouville numbers -- were constructed: They have approximations with unbounded quality, thus they cannot be algebraic. In practice, however, this isn't a very useful method: "Almost all" transcendental numbers also obey the ThueSiegelRoth theorem.

Women also can only have at most 10-20 children over their lifespan, whereas men like Genghis Khan[3] can have a virtually unbounded number. This is why males have a greater evolutionary payoff for high-risk, high-reward behavior: intrinsically higher reproductive variance.

There is a finite number of existing programs whereas the number of future programs to be written is unbounded and very likely to be much higher over time. Therefore forwards compatibility is always, by definition, more important than backwards compatibility, and you should never penalize future programs and programmers for the misdeeds and sloppines of the past programs and programmers.

Nearly 200 years ago, de Tocqueville asked why the American experiment in self-government succeeded while its French counterpart led to the guillotine, mob excesses, and ultimate tyranny and he gave a complex answer whose core was that private moral restraints in the populace served to check the unbounded passions in people that lead to oppression. In other words, the private life that each of us leads will hugely influence the way we are governed.

IT is an immature profession, change is rapid, best practice are constantly changing, client expectations are insane and unbounded, and there are many, many people in the industry with a university degree that can't program their way out of a cardboard box, while there are people with no formal education and a few years of experience that are better than most veterans. The skill of a programmer depends too much on creativity, so a license can only guarantee half of the skillset, not the entire skillset, and therefore it's worthless.

Unbounded definitions

adjective

seemingly boundless in amount, number, degree, or especially extent; "unbounded enthusiasm"; "children with boundless energy"; "a limitless supply of money"

See also: boundless limitless