Undisciplined in a sentence as an adjective

Debugging my own undisciplined habits" really hit it on the head.

Is amazing how many people still believe that a kid who isn't spanked is undisciplined.

The problem is that web shops tend to be driven by success at sales and to be undisciplined about business. They find it impossible to make a "to not do" list and stick to it.

Because I'm saying they're not cursed; they're at best undisciplined and at worst selfish and inconsiderate.

These people are not undisciplined, they are misunderstood. Some people just aren't very good at sitting still for an hour, and repeating that for however many hours they are in school.

Spending excess money on drinks and video games is not simply a matter of being to undisciplined, it's a real need, just one that can be put off. Putting it off indefinitely to invest is not healthy.

I'd like to think that if I did that myself --- it's possible I have, I'm a pretty undisciplined guy --- I'd apologize for it as soon as it was pointed out.

We easily become undisciplined, so we seek the discipline of others instead of finding our own. Some march to someone else's orders, and follow the direction of others.

If I have a beef it is with the irrational, undisciplined, non-illuminating, petty dullness of the whole argument. Because in the many times I have seen this argument, it always seems to go the same way.

I ,for one, am often undisciplined but occasionally very clever. Given that, the Haskell model is very enjoyable ; I've never used it to make money though.

Many commenters here mention that they were/are really bright but also undisciplined and miserable. This underlines something I've been thinking about a lot: that cognitive style accounts for a big chunk of life's success.

The apprentice is lax, undisciplined, and writes buggy code. The journeyman sees all that he has wrought upon the poor world with his awful code, and immediately takes to applying every precept he can to produce rigorously engineered and stable code.

Since building production software in Haskell I've become completely frustrated by Python because I spend far more time building in it due to debugging my own undisciplined habits out of the end product. I'm not a very disciplined dynamic type programmer.

This philosophy that the peon is too stupid and/or undisciplined to manage his own accounts and that the government must protect him from himself is what gets us into huge messes like this in the first place.

People who are too inconsistent to attend class, or too undisciplined to learn a subject they dislike will probably suffer in many jobs, as if everyone did a job they loved, most work would never get done.

Most web devs at the time were undisciplined and lazy and they tended to use a standard reference browser as a guide for creating their layouts. This led to the insanity of sites that looked fine in one browser but were broken in others, typically due to accidentally making use of rendering bugs.

It also tried to help amateurs who just banged on code until it did what they wanted, by generally doing something rather than nothing, and by trying to infer intended behavior from undisciplined code. It was never intended to make large-scale or robust applications, so it didn't make decisions that would facilitate that use-case.

Used in this context, it seems intended to conjure the image of an undisciplined hack who learned how to cobble code together from an "In 21 Days" book. This belies the fact that programming and computing have a long and rich tradition of attracting brilliant individuals who, despite taking alternative paths, still manage to go very deep by virtue of their own drives and all-consuming interests.

For whatever it's worth: if you want Exhibit A for why I don't have a lot of sympathy for people involved in "Lulzsec": breaking into sites and circulating credit card numbers and dumping databases created a set of circumstances that law enforcement absolutely had to respond to, and that's what sets up the crossfire that undisciplined but well-intentioned bug hunters get caught in. The people who go beyond doc'ing vulnerabilities to dump databases and take down sites are in some sense ruining things for everyone else.

Undisciplined definitions

adjective

not subjected to discipline; "undisciplined talent"

adjective

not subjected to correction or discipline; "let her children grow up uncorrected"

See also: uncorrected

adjective

lacking in discipline or control; "undisciplined behavior"; "ungoverned youth"

See also: ungoverned