Sourabh N
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I learned that given a vector space we can construct a basis for it. Can anyone give me an example of this thing (except the trivial example of 2-D and 3-D euclidean space.)
Sourabh N said:First of all, thanks mathwonk for that example.
@ Johan de Vries : As far as I know, for a finite dimensional space we can always construct a basis (though not uniquely).
Sourabh N said:One basis for sols of x+y+z=0 is { (1,0,-1), (0,-1,1) }. This one is orthogonal. But what is the standard basis for this vector space?
Sourabh N said:In my prof's language "God Given".
This vector space is isomorphic to R^{2}, I suppose. So, do I have a standard basis here as I had there.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_basis
Careful with the wording. You probably meant to say we can't construct a basis for the 'general' infinite dimensional vector space. Because we can construct bases for many specific examples, e.g. {1, x, x^2, x^3, ...} is a basis for the space of polynomials in x (over a fixed field).Johan de Vries said:Yes, for finite dimensional vector spaces you can always construct a basis. However for infinite dimensional vector spaces you can only show that a basis exists.
Yes, but that is irrelevant to the question, "how does one construct a basis for a given vector space?"leon1127 said:indicator function on L2 is an example of basis