Unforgiving in a sentence as an adjective

The world can be an unforgiving place, no need for me to not help you along.

But I will suffer the pain, for the web is a brutal, unforgiving no-man's land.

We created unforgiving apps where just glancing at it wrong resulted in data loss.

Employers are increasingly unforgiving of people with gaps in their resumés.

The thing about computer programming is it is unforgiving - your program works or it doesn't. You cannot talk it, fool it, force it, etc., into working.

In the tradition of older 8 bit video games it's extremely unforgiving one mistake and you have to start over.

There are multiple factors:* The battery chemistry is very unforgiving.

There are some hard, unforgiving physical limits on resolution of photographs from orbit, even with digital correction of the images.

If you have a problem that is "easy to express" in Python/Perl/Ruby/Javascript it is expressable in essentially the same way in C++.The gotcha to my mind is more that the C++ environment is unforgiving -- a novice python programmer making a syntax error generally bangs around and gets it to work, maybe with some odd thought errors someone else will have to clean up.

Unforgiving definitions

adjective

unwilling or unable to forgive or show mercy; "a surly unforgiving old woman"

adjective

not to be placated or appeased or moved by entreaty; "grim determination"; "grim necessity"; "Russia's final hour, it seemed, approached with inexorable certainty"; "relentless persecution"; "the stern demands of parenthood"

See also: grim inexorable relentless stern unappeasable unrelenting