@Bacle2 It seems as if a partition of unity will allow us to break up a map into smaller maps. For example, if there was a set A \subset \mathbb{R}^n and \{ \phi_i \} is a partition of unity on A and f was a map on A then given any x \in A we can write f(x) = \sum_{i = 1}^{\infty} \phi_i (x) f(x). Each \phi_i (x) f(x) is smaller than f(x) because the \phi_i(x)f(x) will vanish outside of some open set about x. Thus we are concentrating the map just into that open set. Thus we can prove something or construct something regarding f just in that small open set, then use a partition of unity to "glue it all together". I get that now. My question is - what advantages does this provide? I mean, why not just break up the set into smaller pieces rather than breaking up the map?