Hit-or-miss in a sentence as an adjective

I have to keep scrolling up and down to get another two sentences of text, and even then it's hit-or-miss as to whether it's going to give me more.

Non-cynically, there are some people who might prefer a fixed fee negotiated up front to the hit-or-miss payments from the app store.

Are you conflating Ubuntu with Unity?Unity's kind of hit-or-miss, but Ubuntu as a distro has always been fine for me.

The potential of future personal profit on a small game like this can be very hit-or-miss, but the contributions to our shared culture have already been huge.

Finding it is hit-or-miss, and there are still people who ultimately can't be helped but there are countless success stories - they just aren't worth reporting, like every time antibiotics work as expected.

Perhaps this is human nature, but I think it's often a case of a blogger who has potentially interesting thoughts to share but who simply lacks the time or inclination to do detailed research and editing of their posts, making the hit-or-miss-but-mostly-miss result almost inevitable.

Hit-or-miss definitions

adjective

dependent upon or characterized by chance; "a haphazard plan of action"; "his judgment is rather hit-or-miss"

See also: haphazard