Hodgey8806
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Homework Statement
I tried to state the whole thing, but here it is again:
Prove: A point is in the boundary of if and only if every neighborhood of it contains both a point of A and a point of X\A.
Homework Equations
Boundary def: X\(Int A \cup Ext A)
Def of Int A: \bigcup{C\subseteqX:C\subseteqA and C is open in X}
Def of Ext A: X\\bar{A} where \bar{A} means closed (including boundary)
Def of \bar{A}: \bigcap{B\subseteqX:B\supseteqA and B is closed in X}
The Attempt at a Solution
Please bare with me as this is a little messy. I used a bunch of set theory rules:
Let p\in\deltaA
p\inX\(Int A \cup Ext A)
1) p\in(X\Int A) \wedge 2)p\in(X\Ext A)
Thus breaking each one down separately:
1)p\inX\\bigcup{C\subseteqX:C\subseteqA and C is open in X}
p\in\bigcap{X\C:C\subseteqA and C is open in X}\subseteq=X\A--(I realize now this could have been stated without these set properties.)
2)p\inX\(X\\bar{A})
p\in\bar{A}\supseteqA
Thus every neighborhood of p contains both a point of A and a point of X\A.
Q.E.D.