Interior (topology): Difference between revisions
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In [[mathematics]], the '''interior''' of a subset ''A'' of a [[topological space]] ''X'' is the [[union]] of all [[open set]]s in ''X'' that are [[subset]]s of ''A''. It is usually denoted by <math>A^{\circ}</math>. It may equivalently be defined as the set of all points in ''A'' for which ''A'' is a [[neighbourhood (topology)|neighbourhood]]. | In [[mathematics]], the '''interior''' of a subset ''A'' of a [[topological space]] ''X'' is the [[union]] of all [[open set]]s in ''X'' that are [[subset]]s of ''A''. It is usually denoted by <math>A^{\circ}</math>. It may equivalently be defined as the set of all points in ''A'' for which ''A'' is a [[neighbourhood (topology)|neighbourhood]]. | ||
Revision as of 15:44, 7 February 2009
In mathematics, the interior of a subset A of a topological space X is the union of all open sets in X that are subsets of A. It is usually denoted by . It may equivalently be defined as the set of all points in A for which A is a neighbourhood.
Properties
- A set contains its interior, .
- The interior of a open set G is just G itself, .
- Interior is idempotent: .
- Interior distributes over finite intersection: .
- The complement of the closure of a set in X is the interior of the complement of that set; the complement of the interior of a set in X is the closure of the complement of that set.