Smattering in a sentence as a noun

Instead of a perl script and some SQL, it will use some smattering of the techs that you mention above.

That screenshot is a ghastly smattering of black, grey, and red, with no unified look or feel.

Code Complete, of course; plus a smattering of rebels who think it was boring or irrelevant.

At the time my resume was pure front-end developer with just a smattering of server-side experience.

When she came back a few minutes later, every green lego was out and a smattering of others scattered over the floor.

Everyone's journey is different, however here are a smattering of books/resources that may be insightful and have helped me:1.

Advanced forms of reverse engineering require a large smattering of knowledge from many graduate level areas of Computer Science and Mathematics.

Why bother with getting hired at multiple companies when he could make so much more as a contracting outsourcing group, while not running into even a smattering of trouble?Well, because Bob isn't real, that's why.

But the drive to get eyeballs on ads is inimical to insight; it encourages facile, superficial, and above all speedy publication with a smattering of titillating headlines to draw the readers in.

Smattering definitions

noun

a small number or amount; "only a handful of responses were received"

See also: handful

noun

a slight or superficial understanding of a subject