MHB Open and Closed in V .... D&K Proposition 1.2.17 .... ....

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I am reading "Multidimensional Real Analysis I: Differentiation" by J. J. Duistermaat and J. A. C. Kolk ...

I am focused on Chapter 1: Continuity ... ...

I need help with an aspect of the proof of Proposition 1.2.17 ... ...

Duistermaat and Kolk's Proposition 1.2.17 and the preceding definition (regarding open and closed sets in a set V) read as follows:https://www.physicsforums.com/attachments/7733
View attachment 7734In the above proof of (ii) we read the following:

" ... ... If A is closed in V then A = V \ P with P open in V ... ... "

... BUT in Definition 1.2.16 we read ...

" ... ... A is said to be closed in V if V \ A is open in V ... ... "But ... these two statements are not the same? How do we reconcile the two statements ... specifically how does the statement in the theorem follow from the definition ...

Hope someone can help ...

Peter
 
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Peter said:
In the above proof of (ii) we read the following:

" ... ... If A is closed in V then A = V \ P with P open in V ... ... "

... BUT in Definition 1.2.16 we read ...

" ... ... A is said to be closed in V if V \ A is open in V ... ... "But ... these two statements are not the same? How do we reconcile the two statements ... specifically how does the statement in the theorem follow from the definition ...

Assume that $A$ is closed in the sense of the definition. Then $V \setminus A$ is open in $V$ and $A = V \setminus (V \setminus A)$ so you can take $P = V \setminus A$.
 
Krylov said:
Assume that $A$ is closed in the sense of the definition. Then $V \setminus A$ is open in $V$ and $A = V \setminus (V \setminus A)$ so you can take $P = V \setminus A$.
Hmm ... wish I'd seen that ...:( ...

Thanks for the help Krylov ... appreciate it ...

Peter
 
A sphere as topological manifold can be defined by gluing together the boundary of two disk. Basically one starts assigning each disk the subspace topology from ##\mathbb R^2## and then taking the quotient topology obtained by gluing their boundaries. Starting from the above definition of 2-sphere as topological manifold, shows that it is homeomorphic to the "embedded" sphere understood as subset of ##\mathbb R^3## in the subspace topology.
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