This is an axiomatic treatment of the properties of continuous multivariable functions and related results from topology. The author covers boundedness, extreme values, and uniform continuity of functions, along with connections between continuity and topological concepts such as connectedness and compactness. The order of topics mimics the order of development in elementary calculus, with analogies and generalizations from such familiar ideas as the Pythagorean theorem.
This text is appropriate for a one-semester course in what is usually called ad? vanced calculus of several variables. The focus is on expanding the concept of continuity; specifically, we establish theorems related to extreme and intermediate values, generalizing the important results regarding continuous functions of one real variable. We begin by considering the function f(x, y, ... ) of multiple variables as a function of the single vector variable (x, y, ... ). It turns out that most of the n treatment does not need to be limited to the finite-dimensional spaces R , so we will often place ourselves in an arbitrary vector space equipped with the right tools of measurement. We then proceed much as one does with functions on R. First we give an algebraic and metric structure to the set of vectors. We then define limits, leading to the concept of continuity and to properties of continuous functions. Finally, we enlarge upon some topological concepts that surface along the way. A thorough understanding of single-variable calculus is a fundamental require? ment. The student should be familiar with the axioms of the real number system and be able to use them to develop elementary calculus, that is, to define continuous junction, derivative, and integral, and to prove their most important elementary properties. Familiarity with these properties is a must. To help the reader, we provide references for the needed theorems.Introduction * Euclidian Space * Sequences In Normed Spaces * Lilƒ*