searchspell:paintingcorrected for interior painting
In mathematics, the interior of a set S consists of all points which are intuitively "not on the edge of S". A point which is in the interior of S is an interior point of S. The notion of interior is in many ways dual to the notion of closure.
DefinitionsInterior pointIf S is a subset of an Euclidean space, then x is an interior point of S if there exists an open ball centered at x which is contained in S. This definition generalises to any subset S of a metric space X. Fully expressed, if X is a metric space with metric d, then x is an interior point of S if there exists r > 0, such that y is in S whenever the distance d(x, y) < r. This definition generalises to topological spaces by replacing "open ball" with "neighbourhood". Let S be a subset of a topological space X. Then x is an interior point of S if there exists a neighbourhood of x which is contained in S. Note that this definition does not depend upon whether neighbourhoods are required to be open. Interior of a setThe interior of a set S is the set of all interior points of S. The interior of S is denoted int(S), Int(S), or So. The interior of a set has the following properties.
Sometimes the second or third property above is taken as the definition of the topological interior. Note that these properties are also satisfied if "interior", "subset", "union", "contained in", "largest" and "open" are replaced by "closure", "superset", "intersection", "which contains", "smallest", and "closed". For more on this matter, see interior operator below. Examples
On the set of real numbers one can put other topologies rather than the standard one.
These examples show that the interior of a set depends upon the topology of the underlying space. The last two examples are special cases of the following.
Interior operatorThe interior operator o is dual to the closure operator −, in the sense that
and also
where X denotes the topological space containing S, and the backslash denotes the complement of a set. Therefore, the abstract theory of closure operators and the Kuratowski closure axioms can be easily translated into the language of interior operators, by replacing sets with their complements. See also: interior algebra. Most likely you found this site by searching for painting, but it is probable that you were really looking for information on interior painting instead. The goal of searchspell is to direct the 10 to 20% of all internet queries that contain variant spellings to the resources they were really looking for; in this case "interior painting" resources. If you believe the information on this site is in error, please contact us at mistype@gmail.com to provide details of the misinformation. If you are interested in adding to the content of this site, or if you are interested in supporting the efforts of misytped.info by placing your product information on all of the variant interior painting pages, please contact mistype@gmail.com for details. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "interior".
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