Pair of intersecting lines: Difference between revisions
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| [[satisfies property::second-countable space]] || Yes || || satisfies: [[satisfies property::first-countable space]], [[satisfies property::separable space]] | | [[satisfies property::second-countable space]] || Yes || || satisfies: [[satisfies property::first-countable space]], [[satisfies property::separable space]] | ||
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! colspan="4" style="text-align:center; background: white"| | ! colspan="4" style="text-align:center; background: white"| Uniformness and self-similarity | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[dissatisfies property::homogeneous space]] || No || point of intersection is not similar to other points || | | [[dissatisfies property::homogeneous space]] || No || point of intersection is not similar to other points || |
Revision as of 15:01, 31 May 2016
This article is about a particular topological space (uniquely determined up to homeomorphism)|View a complete list of particular topological spaces
This article describes a standard counterexample to some plausible but false implications. In other words, it lists a pathology that may be useful to keep in mind to avoid pitfalls in proofs
View other standard counterexamples in topology
Definition
A pair of intersecting lines is the underlying topological space of any subset of Euclidean space (of dimension two or higher) that comprises two distinct and intersecting lines. An example is the set:
This is the pair of the -axis and the -axis in .