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Strict

Strict is an adjective describing adherence to rules, standards, or expectations with little tolerance for deviation. It can also refer to something drawn tight or precise, conveying severity or rigorous discipline. The word comes from Latin strictus, meaning drawn tight.

In mathematics and logic, strict denotes exclusion of equality or looseness. A strict inequality, written as <

In computing, strict evaluation evaluates function arguments before the function is applied; non-strict or lazy evaluation

In legal terms, strict liability imposes responsibility for harms without proof of negligence, often in inherently

Beyond technical uses, strict commonly describes policies or behavior characterized by exacting standards or rigorous enforcement,

or
>,
excludes
equality;
in
contrast,
≤
or
≥
are
non-strict
(weak)
inequalities.
A
strict
partial
order
is
a
relation
that
is
transitive
and
irreflexive,
and
strict
implication
(→)
in
logic
is
stronger
than
material
implication.
In
other
domains,
a
strict
interpretation
applies
rules
exactly
as
written
rather
than
more
loosely
or
permissively.
defers
evaluation
until
needed.
JavaScript’s
strict
mode,
activated
by
the
directive
"use
strict,"
opts
into
a
restricted
subset
of
the
language
that
catches
certain
errors
and
forbids
some
problematic
constructs,
improving
reliability
and
security.
dangerous
activities.
Strict
scrutiny
is
a
high
standard
of
judicial
review
used
to
test
laws
affecting
fundamental
rights
or
suspect
classifications,
requiring
a
compelling
government
interest
and
narrow
tailoring.
such
as
a
strict
policy,
strict
discipline,
or
a
strict
adherence
to
guidelines.