Pragmatical in a sentence as an adjective

I see good points for both choices but given the world we're in the pragmatical one is the latter.

Or perchance there are other more pragmatical aspects of things to consider?

It's not as uncomfortable as Kelvin, but it's still way less pragmatical than Celsius.

Ries book is very interesting, and Running Lean is more product focused and pragmatical[1], and less about the theories behind it.

This is probably the best summary of functional programming, written by the best "pragmatical" programmer of the world.

I don't think it's relevant to talk about a thing as specific as hadoop in the context of something as general as the cultural and pragmatical shifts in the Internet.

I'm not talking about bmw or luxury condo, i'm talking about ice cream, beer, high quality fruit, air-con, Toyota, etc. 4, Singapore is meritocratic and being pragmatical.

You should give a course in "social demythification"... I am serious a lot of people suffer because in such a pragmatical way. I 'll just add that rising to top position is more often than not a question of "hacking a system" and if some institutions are really in the business of selecting people that will secure prominent position, they should reward greatly those who have proven they possess plenty of "hacking" skills.

Pragmatical definitions

adjective

of or concerning the theory of pragmatism

See also: pragmatic

adjective

concerned with practical matters; "a matter-of-fact (or pragmatic) approach to the problem"; "a matter-of-fact account of the trip"

See also: matter-of-fact pragmatic