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A topological vector space is a vector space $V$ over a topological field $\mathbb{K}$ (typically $\mathbb{K}=\mathbb{R}$ or $\mathbb{K}=\mathbb{C}$), together with a topology on $V$ such that vector addition and scalar multiplication are both continuous. Hilbert spaces and Banach spaces are examples of topological vector spaces.

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On the equality $\{f\in C(X), f|_A=0\}+\{f\in C(X), f|_B=0\}=\{f\in C(X), f|_{A\cap B}=0\}$

This characterizes normality. That it implies normality was observed above by Remy. Conversely, assume $f$ vanishes on $A\cap B$. Define $h:A\cup B\to\mathbb{R}$ by $h(x)=f(x)$ if $x\in A$ and $h(x)=0 …
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Topology on the set of linear subspaces

Denote the intersection of a closed linear subspace $A$ with the unit sphere by $S_A$, say. You can define the distance of $A$ and $B$ to be the Hausdorff distance between $S_A$ and $S_B$. This will g …
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