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: --
But he does not put much emphasis on informal trust as a precondition for markets.
The good news is that powerful preconditioning techniques have been developed for many problems of practical interest.
It is the failure of this precondition within the context of a syntactically applicable wave-rule which provides the trigger for our proof patching technique.
That goal is removed from the set and replaced by subgoals corresponding to the preconditions of the action.
This is complicated by not just looking for the most likely preconditions as, for example, in criminal investigation or medical diagnosis.
Instead, to observe legitimacy requires an 'objection precondition'.
These preconditions mainly pertained to age, the mental and legal capability of both spouses, and the consent of their guardians, if any.
It was held that trainee preconditions for deep learning in musikdidaktik were strongly related to trainees' musical maturity.