Wrangling in a sentence as a noun

But... that's 15 million lines of code you're wrangling.

Further, I think your parents' question still fits with a little bit of wrangling even if he wasn't fired.

After much wrangling, settled law dictates that the "lower receiver" _is_ the gun; all the other parts are incidental.

Well, getting Linux working on a laptop was more a case of exciting driver wrangling, rather than performance limiting.

And not having a sanctioned committee with varying interests wrangling each other and slowing down progress has also worked out well for Google and Android.

These posts are exceptionally well-timed for me. I'm currently wrangling with one of those problems that is just not solved well with relational databases, or even the flat document store that my company already uses.

Both Democrats and Republicans are fully behind it, despite the political wrangling, assuming that the copyright lobby has made the proper campaign contributions this year.

Counter points to this are that mapping the whole world is something that requires a large networking effect and is not efficient for a company to do.- GIS is one industry that has been seriously plagued by corporate wrangling.

From the VBScript and complex spreadsheet wrangling required to perform analysis of key organizational metrics to mastery of numerous different specialized softwares and systems in order to perform basic functions of the job ranging from accounting to people operations, non-technical employees must have a bevy of technical skills at the ready every single day.

Wrangling definitions

noun

an instance of intense argument (as in bargaining)

See also: haggle haggling wrangle