Unnameable in a sentence as an adjective

If you want to use lambdas though, then yes, you are out of luck as their type is unnameable.

That is, can you name all the things if you put in enough effort, or are some things simply unnameable?

Are you seriously saying there's no magic thing, but that the quality they have is unnameable?

It is very clinical, but in the same way Lovecraft is clinical in his descriptions of the the unnameable.

Unnamed structures are better understood as having a unique but unnameable type.

"[1] and asks,> Isn't it a little bit crazy to talk about computations on real numbers, when most of them are uncomputable/unnameable?

In a wonderful illustration of the article's thesis, the song is also unnameable in the New York Times -- even as a matter of record.

I think that such refactorings are a lot more complex to do reliably in Rust due to ownership and borrowing rules, unnameable types, and so on.

Sat through an offensively content-free Blockchain presentation some time in the past week from an unnameable consultancy.

> Are there anh underlying ‘issues’ with lambdas, I wonder?A lambda object is intrinsically an object with an unnameable type and an overloaded call operator.

The impl trait feature is designed to allow returning closures and other unnameable/complicated types with no unnecessary cost, it's the same as returning a struct in C without compromising on programmer niceties.

It was a mountain of centuries sloping up from the highest antiquity we can conceive, up and up like a mountain whose summit never comes into sight, not to eternity where the thought can rest, but into more and still more time, into freezing wastes and silence of unnameable numbers.

Unnameable definitions

adjective

too sacred to be uttered; "the ineffable name of the Deity"

See also: ineffable unspeakable unutterable