uncastable

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English

Etymology

From un- +‎ castable.

Adjective

uncastable (comparative more uncastable, superlative most uncastable)

  1. That cannot be cast (filled with, or allocated, a theatrical role).
    • 1974 January 21, New York Magazine, volume 7, number 3:
      Colleen Dewhurst, though in many ways wrong for the virtually uncastable Josie, is as lucid and luminous []
    • 1996, Scott Donaldson, The Cambridge companion to Hemingway:
      [] that he would, like many actors, become so stereotyped in the public mind as to be uncastable in other roles []
  2. (computing, programming) That cannot be cast (converted to other data types).
    • 2000, Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen, Jon Orwant, Programming Perl:
      They're strongly typed, uncastable pointers []
  3. (medicine) That cannot be set in a cast.
    • 2005, Mercer Rang, Maya E Pring, Dennis Ray Wenger, Rang's children's fractures:
      ...internal fixation in children with open, unstable, or otherwise uncastable forearm fractures []
  4. That cannot be used for, or produced through, casting (manufacturing with a mould).
    • 1943, The Mining Magazine:
      Casting must be done within a day or two of moulding or the moulds will begin to wind-dry and become uncastable []
    • 1982, Production engineering:
      This allows the casting of otherwise uncastable materials, with acceptable rejection rates, and can increase ductility by as much as a factor of six.