From Counterexamples in Topology by Steen and Seebach (2nd edition) example 129 page 145 we have an example of connected and totally path-disconnected space. It is defined as follow:
Fix $p= (1/2,1/2)$. Let $C$ be the Cantor set in the unit interval $[0,1]$. Let $E \subset C$ be the subset of $C$ that is the endpoints of the removed intervals. Let $F = C \setminus E$. Let $L( c)$ be the line segment connecting the point $c \in C $ to $p$. Define $Y_E=\{(x, y)\in L( c)~|~ c \in E, y \in \mathbb Q \}$ and $Y_F=\{(x, y)\in L( c)~|~ c \in F, y \not\in \mathbb Q \}$ We define Cantor's Leaky Tent or Cantor's Teepee as $Y =Y_E \cup Y_F\subset \mathbb{R}^2$ with the subspace topology.
I have two questions:
- Is there another "well-know" example of connected and totally path-disconnected space?
- Cantor's Teepee is not compact. Can we construct a non trivial compact, connected and totally path-disconnected space?