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Sr. No. Chapter Pages 1 Topological spaces 1 – 18 2 Bases and subspaces 19 – 28 3 Special subsets 29 – 46 4 Different ways of defining topologies 47 – 58 5 Continuous functions 59 – 74 6 Compact spaces 79 – 96 7 Connected spaces 97 – 108 8 First axiom space 109 – 118 9 Second axiom space 119 – 126 10 Lindelof spaces 127– 134 11 Separable spaces 135 – 146 12 T0 – spaces 147 – 154 13 T1 – spaces 155 – 174 14 T2 – spaces 175 – 190 15 Regular spaces and T – spaces 191 – 202 3 16 Normal spaces and T – spaces 203 – 218 4 17 Completely Normal and T – spaces 219 – 228 5 18 Completely regular and – spaces 229 – 238 19 Product spaces and Quotient spaces 239 – 255 Unit 1 §1 Topological spaces:- Definition and examples. §2 The set of all topologies on X. §3 Topological spaces and metric spaces Page | 1 Page | 2 Unit 1: §1 Definition and Examples: Definition 1.1: Let X be any non-empty set. A family of subsets of X is called a topology on X if it satisfies the following conditions: If is a topology on, then the ordered pair is called a topological space (or T- space) Examples 1.2: Throughout X denotes a non-empty set. 1) is a topology on. This topology is called indiscrete topology on and the T- space is called indiscrete topological space. 2) , ( power set of is a topology on and is called discrete topology on and the T-space is called discrete topological space. Remark: If , then discrete and indiscrete topologies on coincide, otherwise they are different. 3) Let ! then ! and are topologies " # on whereas is a not a topology on. $ 4) Let be an infinite set. Define % & ' then is topology on. (i) …… (by definition of) As X – X = , a finite set, (ii) Let . If either or , then . Assume that ( and ( . Then ' is finite and ' is finite. Hence ' ' % ' is Page | 3
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