Is there a way to see whether a topological space $\Omega$ does not allow retractions $r: \Omega \mapsto B$, with $B$ a given subspace of $\Omega$ ?
In other words: when is a space not retractable to a given subspace $B$ ?
Is there a way to see whether a topological space $\Omega$ does not allow retractions $r: \Omega \mapsto B$, with $B$ a given subspace of $\Omega$ ?
In other words: when is a space not retractable to a given subspace $B$ ?
If $\Omega$ is a nonempty space and $x\in \Omega$, then the constant map sending everything to $x$ is a retraction from $\Omega$ to $\{x\}$. So, every nonempty topological space has retracts.