My understanding of this is that a strong acid is an acid that is completely ionized and a weak acid is an acid that is only partially ionized.
This is the usual formal definition. Then you went and confused yourself by calculating pH. pH has nothing to do with the strong/weak acid concept. A strong acid at very low concentration can have a higher pH than a weak acid at very high concentration. (Why?)
The question is a little ambiguous as worded. When you say "the concentration in the water of a monoprotic acid, with the formula HX, is 0.10M", I'm assuming you mean that the initial concentration (before any dissociation) is 0.10M.
First, it is always good to write out a reaction equation.
Next, if HX is a strong acid (it doesn't matter what X is) and you start with 0.1 M, what do you expect the concentrations of HX and the dissociation products to be at equilibrium? Keeping mind you defined a strong acid as one that is (approximately) fully dissociated at equilibrium. You should be able to do this in your head but if you need to, make an ICE table.
This should tell you the answer.
Note that if you meant that the concentration of HX is 0.1M
at equilibrium, this changes the rationale a bit but ultimately not the answer as to whether the acid is strong or weak.