Branched in a sentence as an adjective

It's fascinating to see how well Google has branched out.

"and"These tools allow for analysis to be branched in order to provide multiple root causes"

In the moment where he lost momentum and looked around for a next step, the world "branched out" into a space composed of choices.

What are the advantages of branched history vs linear history?

I started talking about my experience, and he took an active interest and branched off his questions based on the things I had done.

At some point in time the code for the Carrier was branched from the main game code and had diverged beyond any hope of re-integration.

If my feature takes two weeks to develop, when I'm ready to merge, I'm applying my changes to a codebase that's two weeks newer than when I branched.

After understanding it like this, I branched out quite a lot and now all of my academic research involves machine learning.

Best case, the core may still block predicted execution shortly after due to running out of non-dependent instructions, until it knows for sure the address it should have branched to.

You can call it "configuration" if that makes it easier to justify its being in a table, but it doesn't change the fact that Drupal developers spend lots of time building **** that can't go in a VCS, can't be easily tested, can't be branched/merged, and can't be easily deployed without a convoluted export/import dance.

Branched definitions

adjective

resembling a fork; divided or separated into two branches; "the biramous appendages of an arthropod"; "long branched hairs on its legson which pollen collects"; "a forked river"; "a forked tail"; "forked lightning"; "horseradish grown in poor soil may develop prongy roots"

See also: bifurcate biramous forked fork-like forficate pronged prongy

adjective

having branches

See also: branching ramose ramous ramate