Imperativeness in a sentence as a noun

However, for short bits of code that don't leak their imperativeness to the outside world, it doesn't matter.

It's not going to accept straight translations from C, but C doesn't monopolize imperativeness either.

Either way, I'm a huge fan of F# and I think it's imperativeness is all-in-all a very good thing for adoption of the language.

Switched to ocaml, it had enough imperativeness for that, but I got turned off when I got to functors of modules or something like that.

My point is that abstractness and imperativeness are orthogonal.

Or would its internal hyper-imperativeness make that tricky?

TypeScript is very close to PHP, both in imperativeness, in OO-ness, in did-not-initially-support-it-but-sometimes-added-it-later-but-now-its-a-mess-ness, in BW-compatible-ness, in quirkiness.

Imperativeness definitions

noun

the state of demanding notice or attention; "the insistence of their hunger"; "the press of business matters"

See also: insistence insistency press pressure

noun

the quality of being insistent; "he pressed his demand with considerable instancy"

See also: instancy