In general topology there is two ways of introducing a topology on the space of (continuous) maps between, say, metric spaces: set-open topology and uniform topology (it is a uniformity of uniform convergence on a certain family of subsets of the domain). In general they do not coincide; they do if the family consists only of compacts.
Now let $X,Y$ be normed space. The usual norm on the space of continuous linear maps from $X$ into $Y$ defines the topology of uniform convergence on bounded subsets of $X$. My question is whether this topology coincides with the bounded-open topology.
Often in the linear case bounded sets behave like compacts in general, which sort of motivates this question. In fact, the question is valid for any pair of TVS.
The answer is affirmative in the case, when $X$ is reflexive and $Y$ is finite-dimensional. As continuity of a linear map implies the weak continuity, the topology (and hence the uniformity) on $Y$ stays the same, if we replace the original one with the weak, and bounded sets in $X$ become relatively compact, we can rely on the general-topological version.
Thank you.