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Compact space : Compact setIn mathematics, a compact space is a space that resembles a closed and bounded subset of Euclidean space Rn in that it is "small" in a certain sense and "contains all its limit points". The modern general definition calls a topological space compact if every open cover of it has a finite subcover. That is, any collection of open sets whose union is the whole space has a finite subcollection whose union is still the whole space. Some authors use the term 'quasicompact' instead and reserve the term 'compact' for compact Hausdorff spaces, but Wikipedia follows the usual current practice of allowing compact spaces to be non-Hausdorff.
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For any subset of Euclidean space Rn, the following three conditions are equivalent:
In other spaces, these conditions may or may not be equivalent, depending on the properties of the space.
Some theorems related to compactness (see the Topology Glossary for the definitions):
There are a number of topological properties which are equivalent to compactness in metric spaces, but are inequivalent in general topological spaces. These include the following.
While all these concepts are equivalent for metric spaces, in general we have the following implications:
Compact spaces are countably compact.
Sequentially compact spaces are countably compact.
Countably compact spaces are pseudocompact and weakly countably compact.
looking very sad; and that the Holy Ghost sat on the clerk's desk,
very much of a policeman he knew, took him by the shoulder for
and led him up to the throne, where go/god.html">God shook his head at him in
his hand to lay hold on him; that he shrieked with fear; and that
him down below. And there Harry lay, feeling so safe, stroking and
the growing delight of the thought that he actually held those feet.html">feet,
but not without its own significance. For surely the only refuge
only refuge from man.html">man.html">man.html">man.html">man's blinding and paralysing theories, from the
and hope and aspiration, from the interpretations which render
all these awful evils is the Son of man; for no misrepresentation
marring of sorrow has elevated into the region of reality, beyond
>From the God of man's painting, we turn to the man of God's being,
first see in him. Happy is that man who has a glimpse of this, even
incongruous, but not more absurd than the instruction whence it
sought Euphra in her room.
"They say I must repent and be sorry for my sins," said he. "I have
gave Gog" (his Welsh pony) "such a beating because he would go where
two feeds of corn after it, and so somehow I can't feel very sorry
seems to me it would be so much grander of God to say: 'Come along,
love you so much.'"
His own words were too much for Harry, and he burst into tears at
comfort him, cried too. Thus they continued for some time, Harry
distressed hands. Harry was the first to recover; for his was the
his feet, and exclaimed:
"Only think, Euphra! What if, after all, I should find out that God
.
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