0 something that must happen or be true before it is possible for something else to happen:
A halt to the fighting is a precondition for negotiations.
1 something that must happen or be true before it is possible for something else to happen:
2 something which must happen before something else can happen:
This tool uses a set of known plans to learn the preconditions and effects of the action within the plans.
A precondition for the plan's success is therefore the use of interventionist techniques of economic management.
A crucial precondition for getting this right is recognizing that a verbal element carries tense.
However, the ability to change a putative risk or protective factor is an essential precondition for using prevention trials to test theory.
One of the preconditions for each task prior to gripper release is the gripper is holding the object being manipulated.
However, it was always the case that our good regions were submatrices, and this was not a precondition of our finding them.
The dialectics of form and content cannot be disrupted; it is the necessary precondition of how content is presented and what it comprises.
It was held that trainee preconditions for deep learning in musikdidaktik were strongly related to trainees' musical maturity.