| 1. | characterized by or acting in close conformity to requirements or principles: a strict observance of rituals. |
| 2. | stringent or exacting in or in enforcing rules, requirements, obligations, etc.: strict laws; a strict judge. |
| 3. | closely or rigorously enforced or maintained: strict silence. |
| 4. | exact or precise: a strict statement of facts. |
| 5. | extremely defined or conservative; narrowly or carefully limited: a strict construction of the Constitution. |
| 6. | close, careful, or minute: a strict search. |
| 7. | absolute, perfect, or complete; utmost: told in strict confidence. |
| 8. | stern; severe; austere: strict parents. |
| 9. | Obsolete. drawn tight or close. |

strict (strĭkt) adj. strict·er, strict·est
[Middle English stricte, narrow, small, from Latin strictus, tight, strict, past participle of stringere, to draw tight; see streig- in Indo-European roots.] strict'ly adv., strict'ness n. |
strict
A function f is strict in an argument if
f bottom = bottom
(See bottom). In other words, the result depends on the argument so evaluation of an application of the function cannot terminate until evaluation of the argument has terminated.
If the result is only bottom when the argument is bottom then the function is also bottom-unique.
See also strict evaluation, hyperstrict.
(1995-01-25)