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Homework Statement
X, Y are metric spaces and f: X \rightarrow Y
Prove that f is discontinuous at a point x \in X if and only if there is a positive integer n such that diam f(G) \geq 1/n for every open set G that contains x
Homework Equations
diameter of a set = sup{d(x,y): x,y \in set}
sup exists if a set is bounded (here, is our set f(G)?)
The Attempt at a Solution
I'm not understanding "...diam f(G) \geq 1/n..."
should our diameter, in this case, read:
diam f(G) = sup{d(x,f(x)): x, f(x) \in the set} ??
or am I mixing up f(G) and f(x)?
f(x): X\rightarrowY
f(G) = ??
G is an open set that contains x
G={x: x \in R, the reals, for which f(x) is discontinuous}
does that mean f(G) is just an x = f(G) mapping of these discontinuous x's (discontinuous on f: X \rightarrowY) ? (what i mean by mapping is, should I be thinking of f(x) as a graph like y=x? where f(G)= x? )
I'm thinking of an example like this:
f: X\rightarrowY
f(x) = 1/ (x-1)*(x-2) (discontinuous at x=1, x=2)
G-sub1={1}
G-sub2={2}
I don't know what f(G) is; is it f(1)=1? does f(2)=2? so I'm not sure how to relate it to the diameter, namely f(G) \geq 1/n
I'm doing this example just to try and see what's going on with the terms, not because the proof is going to include the function i presented here (obviously)
Am I thinking of this the wrong way? I know the proof will be in more general terms but I'm not sure what to do with the diam f(G) \geq 1/n for n, a positive integer
If someone can point me in the right direction or just explain it - I think once diam f(G) \geq 1/n is clarified, I can work through the rest of the problem, namely the general proof. I asked my professor about it today - I told him I didn't understand the diam part - and he sort of looked at me like I had grown a third head. Is this some very obvious definition I have missed? I'm using Rudin by the way, only at chapter 5.
Thank you for any insight!