Complete metric space: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Hendra I. Nurdin
(replaced erroneous engineering cat with live cat)
imported>Larry Sanger
m (Completeness moved to Completeness (mathematics): It's the name of a different property, in logic)
(No difference)

Revision as of 11:20, 2 October 2007

In mathematics, completeness is a property ascribed to a metric space in which every Cauchy sequence in that space is convergent. In other words, every Cauchy sequence in the metric space tends in the limit to a point which is again an element of that space. Hence the metric space is, in a sense, "complete."

Formal definition

Let X be a metric space with metric d. Then X is complete if for every Cauchy sequence there is an associated element such that .

See also

Banach space

Hilbert space