Primitively in a sentence as an adverb

Until then, we're still living primitively... in the jungle as a savage, infant race.

But K&R’s book explained the language, how it worked, and how to program — in the most primitively satisfying way.

>Sex is really only healthy where there is mutual love and at least some level of commitment; Sex itself is the goal for most men, at least primitively. The rest is just a bonus.

I really can never understand this desire to get away from it all and live primitively. It sounds so miserable.

Try living primitively, without technology, no stove, no refrigerator, no guns, no tractors, none of this stuff. What are you going to eat?

It says that in all but the most primitively simple systems, you can make statements that are impossible to prove right or wrong within the system.

Status is most primitively done using a PID file. Other extensions like conditional restart can be added.

I don't think that treating albums as "just a playlist by the artist" is a powerful concept when you treat playlists so primitively to begin with.

I wrote a python recorder that would start recording upon utterances, then stop and curl the result to Google, take the result, primitively do some NLP, route the request to Yelp/Google/Wikipedia and return a response to a web frontend. What I learned?

Those who advocate for generally believe that punishment is not primitively a method for fixing behavior, though that might or might not occur. Instead, it is a form of intentionally inflecting damage/pain for justice[1].

If you live absolutely primitively, then your circumstances force you to align your life and habits to those behaviors that sustain life. There is something external to yourself which constrains the actions that contribute to your continued survival.

Clearly, "repeat" is primitively co-recursive, and "length" is primitively recursive, but "length . repeat" is non-terminating.

The local hardware just primitively collects footage and that small responsibility is something I can trust in a form of 'separation of concerns'. It would be neat to extend this further where the company behind the product distributes the codebase for this webapp that you can run locally if you choose.

I don't know that a collective of engineers and software developers would behave quite so primitively. Defense lawyers, for example, try to keep them off juries because they are often impossible to sway out of their analytical opinions using emotional appeals.

Also, the article says, "Custom allocators, in contrast, typically break these invariants permanently, because they allocate objects of statically unspecified shape in a block of primitively allocated memory." I'm not entirely sure, but it sounds like this means you can't use any library that uses a custom allocator.

Life is what happens when you shut off the computer and go and live it - which is odd, because I can quite happily go camping and leave all my gadgets at home and live primitively for weeks at a time, no cell phone, no computer, no electricity, no running water. Somehow my brain separates the electronic life as part of our culture, which has somehow forgotten how to live without all this technology at our fingertips.

For example, a primitively optimized function that's twice as fast for input size 100 would still be twice as fast for input size 100,000, but a function optimized to be an order less complex could be twice as fast for size 100, and a thousand or so times as fast for size 100,000. The latter optimization would be significantly better, objectively, and thus, it would make a lot of sense to look at the first program and be unimpressed with a mere linear doubling in speed.

Primitively definitions

adverb

with reference to the origin or beginning

See also: originally

adverb

in a primitive style or manner; "rather primitively operated foundries"