fderingoz
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I read the proof of the proposition "every cauchy sequence in a metric spaces is bounded" from
http://www.proofwiki.org/wiki/Every_Cauchy_Sequence_is_Bounded
I don't understand that how we can take m=N_{1} while m>N_{1} ?
In fact i mean that in a metric space (A,d) can we say that
[\forallm,n>N_{1}\Rightarrow d(x_{n},x_{m})<1]\Rightarrow[\foralln\geqN_{1}\Rightarrow d(x_{n},x_{_{N_{1}}})<1]
http://www.proofwiki.org/wiki/Every_Cauchy_Sequence_is_Bounded
I don't understand that how we can take m=N_{1} while m>N_{1} ?
In fact i mean that in a metric space (A,d) can we say that
[\forallm,n>N_{1}\Rightarrow d(x_{n},x_{m})<1]\Rightarrow[\foralln\geqN_{1}\Rightarrow d(x_{n},x_{_{N_{1}}})<1]
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