show/hide this revision's text 2 Texified V to $V$

A more canonical approach (edited) Readers of the canonical faith may suppress coordinates as follows.

Consider a $k$ - vector space $V$ of dimension $n+1$, its projectivization $\mathbb P (V)$ and its embedding $\mathbb P (V) \to \mathbb P (k \oplus V)$ sending the point $\mathbb P (l) \in \mathbb P (V) $ to the point $\mathbb P (0\oplus l) \in \mathbb P (k \oplus V)$. The vector bundle $\mathcal O _{\mathbb P (V)} (1)$ then has as total space the open subset $T\subset \mathbb P (k \oplus V)$ obtained by deleting $x=\mathbb P (k \oplus 0)$ from $\mathbb P (k \oplus V)$ i.e. $T= \mathbb P (k \oplus V)\setminus x$. The fiber over $\mathbb P (l)$ [identified with $\mathbb P (0\oplus l)$] is $\mathbb P (k \oplus l)\setminus x$, a vector space of dimension one with origin the point $\mathbb P (0 \oplus l)$ but with no prefered isomorphism to $k$.

Elementary geometry It may clarify the above to recall that given a one dimensional projective space $\mathbb P$ over $k$, if you delete a point $x$ from it you get a one dimensional affine space $\mathbb P \setminus x$ and if you choose in it an origin, you get a one dimensional vector space, but that vector space has no prefered isomorphism with the vector space $k$.

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Dear Luther King, since you ask for equations, let me add them to Tony's beautifully geometric answer.

Consider $\mathbb P^{n+1}$ with homogeneous coordinates $(z_0:z_1:\ldots:z_{n+1})$ and $\mathbb P^{n}$ enbedded as the hyperplane $z_0=0$. If $x\in\mathbb P^{n+1}$ is the point $x=(1:0:\ldots:0)$, the required total space $T=Tot \mathcal O_{\mathbb P^{n}}(1)$ is the complement $T=\mathbb P^{n+1} \setminus \{x\}$ of $x$ in $\mathbb P^{n+1}$. The fiber of our bundle $\mathcal O_{\mathbb P^{n}}(1)$ at the arbitrary point $(0:z_1:\ldots:z_{n+1}) \in \mathbb P^n$ is the set of all $(\lambda:z_1:\ldots:z_{n+1})$ with $\lambda \in k$ (base field) .

The one-dimensional vector space structure on the fiber is given by $(\lambda:z_1:\ldots:z_{n+1})+(\mu:z_1:\ldots:z_{n+1})=(\lambda +\mu:z_1:\ldots:z_{n+1})$ and similarly for products by scalars. Beware that we definitely do not have an isomorphism from our fiber to $k$ defined by $(\lambda:z_1:\ldots:z_{n+1})\mapsto \lambda$: this is not even a well-defined map. This is not surprising: after all $\mathcal O_{\mathbb P^{n}}(1)$ is not a trivial bundle!