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{{Short description|"Small" subset of a topological space}}
{{Short description|"Small" subset of a topological space}}
In the [[Mathematics|mathematical]] fields of [[general topology]] and [[descriptive set theory]], a '''meagre set''' (also called a '''meager set''' or a '''set of first category''') is a [[Set (mathematics)|set]] that, considered as a [[subset]] of a (usually larger) [[topological space]], is in a precise sense small or [[Negligible set|negligible]].
In the [[Mathematics|mathematical]] field of [[general topology]], a '''meagre set''' (also called a '''meager set''' or a '''set of first category''') is a [[subset]] of a [[topological space]] that is small or [[Negligible set|negligible]] in a precise sense detailed below. A set that is not meagre is called '''nonmeagre''', or '''of the second category'''. See below for definitions of other related terms.
A topological space {{mvar|T}} is called '''meagre''' if it is a meager subset of itself; otherwise, it is called '''nonmeagre'''.


The meagre subsets of a fixed space form a [[Sigma-ideal|σ-ideal]] of subsets; that is, any subset of a meagre set is meagre, and the [[Union (set theory)|union]] of [[Countable set|countably]] many meagre sets is meagre.
The meagre subsets of a fixed space form a [[Sigma-ideal|σ-ideal]] of subsets; that is, any subset of a meagre set is meagre, and the [[union (set theory)|union]] of [[Countable set|countably]] many meagre sets is meagre.
General topologists use the term [[Baire space]] to refer to a broad class of topological spaces on which the notion of meagre set is not trivial (in particular, the entire space is not meagre).
[[Descriptive set theory|Descriptive set theorists]] mostly study meagre sets as subsets of the [[real number]]s, or more generally any [[Polish space]], and reserve the term [[Baire space (set theory)|Baire space]] for one particular Polish space.


Meagre sets play an important role in the formulation of the notion of [[Baire space]] and of the [[Baire category theorem]], which is used in the proof of several fundamental results of [[functional analysis]].
The [[Complement (set theory)|complement]] of a meagre set is a '''comeagre set''' or '''residual set'''.
A set that is not meagre is called '''nonmeagre''' and is said to be of '''the second category'''.
Note that the notions of a comeagre set and a nonmeagre set are {{em|not}} equivalent.


==Definitions==
==Definitions==
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Throughout, <math>X</math> will be a [[topological space]].
Throughout, <math>X</math> will be a [[topological space]].


The definition of meagre set uses the notion of a [[nowhere dense]] subset of <math>X,</math> that is, a subset of <math>X</math> whose [[closure (topology)|closure]] has empty [[interior (topology)|interior]]. See the corresponding article for more details.
A subset of <math>X</math> is called '''{{visible anchor|meagre in}} <math>X,</math>''' a '''{{visible anchor|meagre subset|text=meagre sub{{em|set}}}} of <math>X,</math>''' or of the '''{{visible anchor|first category}} in <math>X</math>''' if it is a countable union of [[nowhere dense]] subsets of <math>X</math> (where a nowhere dense set is a set whose closure has empty interior).{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|p=389}}


A subset that is not meagre in <math>X</math> is called '''{{visible anchor|nonmeagre in}} <math>X,</math>''' a '''{{visible anchor|nonmeagre subset|text=nonmeagre sub{{em|set}}}} of <math>X,</math>''' or of the '''{{visible anchor|second category}} in <math>X.</math>'''{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|p=389}}
A subset of <math>X</math> is called '''{{visible anchor|meagre in}} <math>X,</math>''' a '''{{visible anchor|meagre subset|text=meagre subset}} of <math>X,</math>''' or of the '''{{visible anchor|first category}} in <math>X</math>''' if it is a countable union of [[nowhere dense]] subsets of <math>X</math>.{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|p=389}} Otherwise, the subset is called '''{{visible anchor|nonmeagre in}} <math>X,</math>''' a '''{{visible anchor|nonmeagre subset|text=nonmeagre subset}} of <math>X,</math>''' or of the '''{{visible anchor|second category}} in <math>X.</math>'''{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|p=389}} The qualifier "in <math>X</math>" can be omitted if the ambient space is fixed and understood from context.


A topological space is called '''{{visible anchor|meagre|meagre space}}''' (respectively, '''{{visible anchor|nonmeagre|nonmeagre space}}''') if it is a meagre (respectively, nonmeagre) subset of itself.
A topological space is called '''{{visible anchor|meagre|meagre space}}''' (respectively, '''{{visible anchor|nonmeagre|nonmeagre space}}''') if it is a meagre (respectively, nonmeagre) subset of itself.


A subset <math>A</math> of <math>X</math> is called '''{{visible anchor|comeagre}} in <math>X,</math>''' or '''{{visible anchor|residual|residual subset|residual set}} in <math>X,</math>''' if its [[complement (set theory)|complement]] <math>X \setminus A</math> is meagre in <math>X</math>. (This use of the prefix "co" is consistent with its use in other terms such as "[[Cofiniteness|cofinite]]".)
It may be important to distinguish nonmeagre sub''spaces'' from nonmeagre sub''sets''.{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|p=389|loc=Example 11.6.2 (c) "Singletons are always nonmeager sub''spaces''. A singleton is a nonmeager sub''set'' of a topological space iff the point is isolated."}} If <math>S \subseteq X</math> is a subset of <math>X</math> then <math>S</math> being a "meagre sub'''{{em|space}}'''" of <math>X</math> means that when <math>S</math> is endowed with the [[subspace topology]] (induced on it by <math>X</math>) then <math>S</math> is a meagre topological space (that is, <math>S</math> is a meagre subset of <math>S</math>). In contrast, <math>S</math> being a "meagre sub'''{{em|set}}'''" of <math>X</math> means that <math>S</math> is equal to a countable union of nowhere dense subsets of <math>X.</math> The same warning applies to nonmeagre sub'''{{em|set}}'''s versus nonmeagre sub'''{{em|space}}'''s. More details on how to tell these notions apart (and why the slight difference in these terms is reasonable) are given in this footnote.<ref group=note>This distinction between "subspace" and "subset" is a consequence of the fact that in general topology, the word "space" means "[[topological space]]", which is a {{em|pair}} <math>(X, \tau)</math> consisting of a set and [[Topology (structure)|topology]], and (similarly) the word "subspace" means "[[topological subspace]]"; consequently, "sub{{em|space}} of <math>X</math>" refers to the pair consisting of the subset together with the [[subspace topology]] that it inherits from <math>X</math> whereas "sub{{em|set}} of <math>X</math>" refers only to the set. Consequently, if the subset <math>S</math> lacks any topology then "<math>S</math> is meagre of subset of <math>S</math>" is not well-defined, leaving "<math>S</math> is a meagre subset of <math>X</math>" as the only possible meaning of "<math>S</math> is meagre". But if <math>S</math> is endowed with a topology then (by definition) "<math>S</math> is meagre" means "<math>S</math> is a meagre subset of <math>S.</math>" Saying "<math>S</math> is a meagre subspace of <math>X</math>" is just a combination of the following two statements: (1) "<math>S</math> is a subspace of <math>X</math>", which by definition means that <math>S</math> is endowed with a topology that is equal to the [[subspace topology]] induced by on it by <math>X</math> (denote this topology by <math>\tau_S</math>), and (2) "<math>S</math> is a meagre space", which by definition means "<math>S</math> is a meagre subset of <math>\left(S, \tau_S\right)</math>". However, if <math>S</math> happens to be endowed with a topology (say <math>\tau_S</math>) then the statement "<math>S</math> is a meagre subset of <math>X</math>" does not mean "<math>S</math> is a meagre subset of <math>\left(S, \tau_S\right)</math>" because in this statement, <math>S</math> is being considered as a set (and not as a topological space). The same is true of a statement such as "let <math>S</math> be a subspace of <math>X</math> that is a meagre subset of <math>X</math>" and its more succinct equivalent "let <math>S</math> be a subspace that is meagre in <math>X</math>" (note that the meaning is completely changed without the words "in <math>X</math>").</ref>
A subset is comeagre in <math>X</math> if and only if it is equal to a countable [[intersection (set theory)|intersection]] of sets, each of whose interior is dense in <math>X.</math>


'''Remarks on terminology'''
For example, if <math>S := \N</math> is the set of all positive integers then <math>S</math> is a meager sub{{em|set}} of <math>\R</math> but not a meager sub{{em|space}} of <math>\R.</math> If <math>x \in X</math> is not an [[isolated point]] of a [[T1 space|T<sub>1</sub> space]] <math>X</math> (meaning that <math>\{x\}</math> is not an open subset of <math>X</math>) then <math>\{x\}</math> is a meager sub{{em|space}} of <math>X</math> but not a meager sub{{em|set}} of <math>X.</math>{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|p=389}}


The notions of nonmeagre and comeagre should not be confused. If the space <math>X</math> is meagre, every subset is both meagre and comeagre, and there are no nonmeagre sets. If the space <math>X</math> is nonmeager, no set is at the same time meagre and comeager, every comeagre set is nonmeagre, and there can be nonmeagre sets that are not comeagre, that is, with nonmeagre complement. See the Examples section below.
A subset <math>A \subseteq X</math> is called a '''{{visible anchor|residual subset|residual set}} of <math>X</math>''' and is said to be '''{{visible anchor|comeagre}} in <math>X</math>''' if its [[Complement (set theory)|complement]] <math>X \setminus A</math> is meagre in <math>X</math>. (This use of the prefix "co" is consistent with its use in other terms such as "[[Cofiniteness|cofinite]]".)
A subset is comeagre in <math>X</math> if and only if it is equal to an [[Intersection (set theory)|intersection]] of countably many sets, each of whose topological interior is a dense subset of <math>X.</math>


As an additional point of terminology, if a subset <math>A</math> of a topological space <math>X</math> is given the [[subspace topology]] induced from <math>X</math>, one can talk about it being a meagre space, namely being a meagre subset of itself (when considered as a topological space in its own right). In this case <math>A</math> can also be called a ''meagre subspace'' of <math>X</math>, meaning a meagre space when given the subspace topology. Importantly, this is not the same as being meagre in the whole space <math>X</math>. (See the Properties and Examples sections below for the relationship between the two.) Similarly, a ''nonmeagre subspace'' will be a set that is nonmeagre in itself, which is not the same as being nonmeagre in the whole space. Be aware however that in the context of [[topological vector spaces]] some authors may use the phrase "meagre/nonmeagre subspace" to mean a vector subspace that is a meagre/nonmeagre set relative to the whole space.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Schaefer |first1=Helmut H. |title=Topological Vector Spaces |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5_1QAAAAMAAJ&q=%22meager+subspace%22&dq=%22meager+subspace%22 |publisher=Macmillan |date=1966}}</ref>
Importantly, being of the second category is {{em|not}} the same as being comeagre — a set may be neither meagre nor comeagre (in this case it will be of second category).


The terms ''first category'' and ''second category'' were the original ones used by [[René Baire]] in his thesis.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Baire |first1=René |title=Sur les fonctions de variables réelles |journal=Annali di Mat. Pura ed Appl. |date=1899 |pages=1-123 |url=https://archive.org/details/surlesfonctions00bairgoog/page/n12/mode/2up |series=3 |doi=10.1007/BF02419243}}, page 65</ref> The ''meagre'' terminology was introduced by [[Nicolas Bourbaki|Bourbaki]].{{sfn|Bourbaki|1989|p=192}}
The terms ''first category'' and ''second category'' were the original ones used by [[René Baire]] in his thesis of 1899.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Baire |first1=René |title=Sur les fonctions de variables réelles |journal=Annali di Mat. Pura ed Appl. |date=1899 |pages=1-123 |url=https://archive.org/details/surlesfonctions00bairgoog/page/n12/mode/2up |series=3}}, page 65</ref> The ''meagre'' terminology was introduced by [[Nicolas Bourbaki|Bourbaki]] in 1948.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Oxtoby |first1=J. |title=Cartesian products of Baire spaces |journal=[[Fundamenta Mathematicae]] |date=1961 |volume=49 |issue=2 |pages=157–166 |doi=10.4064/fm-49-2-157-166 |url=http://matwbn.icm.edu.pl/ksiazki/fm/fm49/fm49113.pdf}}"Following Bourbaki [...], a topological space is called a Baire space if ..."</ref>{{sfn|Bourbaki|1989|p=192}}


==Properties==
==Examples==

The empty set is always a closed nowhere dense (and thus meagre) subset of every topological space.

In the nonmeagre space <math>X=[0,1]\cup([2,3]\cap\Q)</math> the set <math>[2,3]\cap\Q</math> is meagre. The set <math>[0,1]</math> is nonmeagre and comeagre.

In the nonmeagre space <math>X=[0,2]</math> the set <math>[0,1]</math> is nonmeagre. But it is not comeagre, as its complement <math>(1,2]</math> is also nonmeagre.

A countable [[T1 space|T<sub>1</sub> space]] without [[isolated point]] is meagre. So it is also meagre in any space that contains it as a subspace. For example, <math>\Q</math> is both a meagre subspace of <math>\R</math> (that is, meagre in itself with the subspace topology induced from <math>\R</math>) and a meagre subset of <math>\R.</math>

The [[Cantor set]] is nowhere dense in <math>\R</math> and hence meagre in <math>\R.</math> But it is nonmeagre in itself, since it is a [[complete metric space]].

The set <math>([0,1]\cap\Q)\cup\{2\}</math> is not nowhere dense in <math>\R</math>, but it is meagre in <math>\R</math>. It is nonmeagre in itself (since as a subspace it contains an isolated point).

The line <math>\R\times\{0\}</math> is meagre in the plane <math>\R^2.</math> But it is a nonmeagre subspace, that is, it is nonmeagre in itself.

The set <math>S = (\Q \times \Q) \cup (\Reals \times \{0\})</math> is a meagre sub{{em|set}} of <math>\R^2</math> even though its meagre subset <math>\Reals \times \{0\}</math> is a nonmeagre sub{{em|space}} (that is, <math>\R</math> is not a meagre topological space).{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|pp=371-423}}
A countable Hausdorff space without [[isolated point]]s is meagre, whereas any topological space that contains an isolated point is nonmeagre.{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|pp=371-423}}
Because the [[rational numbers]] are countable, they are meagre as a subset of the reals and as a space—that is, they do not form a [[Baire space]].

Any topological space that contains an [[isolated point]] is nonmeagre{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|pp=371-423}} (because no set containing the isolated point can be nowhere dense). In particular, every nonempty [[discrete space]] is nonmeagre.

There is a subset <math>H</math> of the real numbers <math>\R</math> that splits every nonempty open set into two nonmeagre sets. That is, for every nonempty open set <math>U\subseteq \mathbb{R}</math>, the sets <math>U\cap H</math> and <math>U \setminus H</math> are both nonmeagre.

In the space <math>C([0,1])</math> of continuous real-valued functions on <math>[0,1]</math> with the topology of [[uniform convergence]], the set <math>A</math> of continuous real-valued functions on <math>[0,1]</math> that have a derivative at some point is meagre.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Banach, S.|title=Über die Baire'sche Kategorie gewisser Funktionenmengen|journal=[[Studia Math.]]|volume=3|issue=1|year=1931|pages=174–179|doi=10.4064/sm-3-1-174-179|url=https://eudml.org/doc/217560|doi-access=free}}</ref>{{sfn|Willard|2004|loc=Theorem 25.5}} Since <math>C([0,1])</math> is a complete metric space, it is nonmeagre. So the complement of <math>A</math>, which consists of the continuous real-valued [[nowhere differentiable function]]s on <math>[0,1],</math> is comeagre and nonmeagre. In particular that set is not empty. This is one way to show the existence of continuous nowhere differentiable functions.

On an infinite-dimensional Banach, there exists a [[discontinuous linear functional]] whose kernel is nonmeagre.<ref name="subspace of Banach"> https://mathoverflow.net/questions/3188/are-proper-linear-subspaces-of-banach-spaces-always-meager</ref> Also, under [[Martin's axiom]], on each separable Banach space, there exists a discontinuous linear functional whose kernel is meagre (this statement disproves the Wilansky–Klee conjecture<ref> https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1966-72-04/S0002-9904-1966-11547-1/S0002-9904-1966-11547-1.pdf</ref>).<ref name="subspace of Banach" />

==Characterizations and sufficient conditions==

Every nonempty [[Baire space]] is nonmeagre. In particular, by the [[Baire category theorem]] every nonempty [[complete metric space]] and every nonempty [[locally compact Hausdorff]] space is nonmeagre.

Every nonempty [[Baire space]] is nonmeagre but there exist nonmeagre spaces that are not Baire spaces.{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|pp=371-423}} Since [[Complete metric space|complete]] [[Pseudometric space|(pseudo)]][[metric space]]s as well as [[Hausdorff space|Hausdorff]] [[locally compact]] spaces [[Baire category theorem|are Baire spaces]], they are also nonmeagre spaces.{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|pp=371–423}}

Any subset of a meagre set is a meagre set, as is the union of countably many meagre sets.{{sfn|Rudin|1991|p=43}}
If <math>h : X \to X</math> is a [[homeomorphism]] then a subset <math>S \subseteq X</math> is meagre if and only if <math>h(S)</math> is meagre.{{sfn|Rudin|1991|p=43}}


Every nowhere dense subset of <math>X</math> is meagre. Consequently, any closed subset with empty interior is meagre. Thus a closed nonmeagre subset of <math>X</math> must have nonempty interior.
Every nowhere dense subset is a meagre set.{{sfn|Rudin|1991|p=43}} Consequently, any closed subset of <math>X</math> whose interior in <math>X</math> is empty is of the first category of <math>X</math> (that is, it is a meager subset of <math>X</math>).


The {{visible anchor|'''Banach category theorem'''}}{{sfn|Oxtoby|1980|p=62}} states that in any space <math>X,</math> the union of any family of open sets of the first category is of the first category.
(1) Any subset of a meagre set is meagre; (2) any countable union of meagre sets is meagre. Thus the meagre subsets of a fixed space form a [[Sigma-ideal|σ-ideal]] of subsets, a suitable notion of [[negligible set]]. And, equivalently to (1), any superset of a nonmeagre set is nonmeagre.


All subsets and all countable unions of meagre sets are meagre. Thus the meagre subsets of a fixed space form a [[Sigma-ideal|σ-ideal]] of subsets, a suitable notion of [[negligible set]].
Dually, (1) any superset of a comeagre set is comeagre; (2) any countable intersection of comeagre sets is comeagre.
Dually, all [[superset]]s and all countable intersections of comeagre sets are comeagre. Every superset of a nonmeagre set is nonmeagre.


Suppose <math>A\subseteq Y\subseteq X,</math> where <math>Y</math> has the [[subspace topology]] induced from <math>X.</math> The set <math>A</math> may be meagre in <math>X</math> without being meagre in <math>Y.</math> However the following results hold:{{sfn|Bourbaki|1989|p=192}}
Suppose <math>A \subseteq Y \subseteq X,</math> where <math>Y</math> has the [[subspace topology]] induced from <math>X.</math> The set <math>A</math> may be meagre in <math>X</math> without being meagre in <math>Y.</math> However the following results hold:{{sfn|Bourbaki|1989|p=192}}
* If <math>A</math> is meagre in <math>Y,</math> then <math>A</math> is meagre in <math>X.</math>
* If <math>A</math> is meagre in <math>Y,</math> then <math>A</math> is meagre in <math>X.</math>
* If <math>Y</math> is open in <math>X,</math> then <math>A</math> is meagre in <math>Y</math> if and only if <math>A</math> is meagre in <math>X.</math>
* If <math>Y</math> is open in <math>X,</math> then <math>A</math> is meagre in <math>Y</math> if and only if <math>A</math> is meagre in <math>X.</math>
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* If <math>Y</math> is dense in <math>X,</math> then <math>A</math> is nonmeagre in <math>Y</math> if and only if <math>A</math> is nonmeagre in <math>X.</math>
* If <math>Y</math> is dense in <math>X,</math> then <math>A</math> is nonmeagre in <math>Y</math> if and only if <math>A</math> is nonmeagre in <math>X.</math>


In particular, every subset of <math>X</math> that is meagre in itself is meagre in <math>X.</math> Every subset of <math>X</math> that is nonmeagre in <math>X</math> is nonmeagre in itself. And for an open set or a dense set in <math>X,</math> being meagre in <math>X</math> is equivalent to being meagre in itself, and similarly for the nonmeagre property.
Any topological space that contains an [[isolated point]] is nonmeagre (because no set containing the isolated point can be nowhere dense). In particular, every nonempty [[discrete space]] is nonmeagre.


A topological space <math>X</math> is nonmeagre if and only if every countable intersection of dense open sets in <math>X</math> is nonempty.{{sfn|Willard|2004|loc=Theorem 25.2}}
A topological space <math>X</math> is nonmeagre if and only if every countable intersection of dense open sets in <math>X</math> is nonempty.{{sfn|Willard|2004|loc=Theorem 25.2}}


==Properties==
Every nonempty [[Baire space]] is nonmeagre. In particular, by the [[Baire category theorem]] every [[Complete metric space|complete]] [[Pseudometric space|(pseudo)]][[metric space]] and every [[locally compact]] [[Hausdorff space|Hausdorff]] space is nonmeagre.


A nonmeagre [[locally convex topological vector space]] is a [[barreled space]].{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|pp=371-423}}
{{visible anchor|'''Banach category theorem:'''}}{{sfn|Oxtoby|1980|p=62}} In any topological space <math>X,</math> the union of an arbitrary family of meagre open sets is a meagre set.

Every nowhere dense subset of <math>X</math> is meagre. Consequently, any closed subset with empty interior is meagre. Thus a closed subset of <math>X</math> that is of the second category in <math>X</math> must have non-empty interior in <math>X</math>{{sfn|Rudin|1991|pp=42-43}} (because otherwise it would be nowhere dense and thus of the first category).

If <math>B \subseteq X</math> is of the second category in <math>X</math> and if <math>S_1, S_2, \ldots</math> are subsets of <math>X</math> such that <math>B \subseteq S_1 \cup S_2 \cup \cdots</math> then at least one <math>S_n</math> is of the second category in <math>X.</math>


===Meagre subsets and Lebesgue measure===
===Meagre subsets and Lebesgue measure===


There exist nowhere dense subsets (which are thus meagre subsets) that have positive [[Lebesgue measure]].{{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|pp=371-423}}
A meagre set in <math>\R</math> need not have [[Lebesgue measure]] zero, and can even have full measure. For example, in the interval <math>[0,1]</math> [[fat Cantor set]]s are closed nowhere dense and they can be constructed with a measure arbitrarily close to <math>1.</math> The union of a countable number of such sets with measure approaching <math>1</math> gives a meagre subset of <math>[0,1]</math> with measure <math>1.</math><ref>{{cite web |title=Is there a measure zero set which isn't meagre? |url=https://mathoverflow.net/questions/43478 |website=MathOverflow}}</ref>


Dually, there can be nonmeagre sets with measure zero. The complement of any meagre set of measure <math>1</math> in <math>[0,1]</math> (for example the one in the previous paragraph) has measure <math>0</math> and is comeagre in <math>[0,1],</math> and hence nonmeagre in <math>[0,1]</math> since <math>[0,1]</math> is a Baire space.
A meagre set in <math>\R</math> need not have [[Lebesgue measure]] zero, and can even have full measure. For example, in the interval <math>[0,1]</math> [[fat Cantor set]]s, like the [[Smith–Volterra–Cantor set]], are closed nowhere dense and they can be constructed with a measure arbitrarily close to <math>1.</math> The union of a countable number of such sets with measure approaching <math>1</math> gives a meagre subset of <math>[0,1]</math> with measure <math>1.</math><ref>{{cite web |title=Is there a measure zero set which isn't meagre? |url=https://mathoverflow.net/questions/43478 |website=MathOverflow}}</ref>


Dually, there can be nonmeagre sets with measure zero. The complement of any meagre set of measure <math>1</math> in <math>[0,1]</math> (for example the one in the previous paragraph) has measure <math>0</math> and is comeagre in <math>[0,1],</math> and hence nonmeagre in <math>[0,1]</math> since <math>[0,1]</math> is a Baire space.
Here is another example of a nonmeagre set in <math>\R</math> with measure <math>0</math>:

:<math>\bigcap_{m=1}^{\infty}\bigcup_{n=1}^{\infty} \left(r_{n}-\left(\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^{n+m}, r_{n}+\left(\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^{n+m}\right)</math>
Here is another example of a nonmeagre set in <math>\Reals</math> with measure <math>0</math>:
where <math>\left(r_n\right)_{n=1}^{\infty}</math> is a sequence that enumerates the rational numbers.
<math display=block>\bigcap_{m=1}^{\infty}\bigcup_{n=1}^{\infty} \left(r_{n}-\left(\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^{n+m}, r_{n}+\left(\tfrac{1}{2}\right)^{n+m}\right)</math>
where <math>r_1, r_2, \ldots</math> is a sequence that enumerates the rational numbers.


===Relation to Borel hierarchy===
===Relation to Borel hierarchy===
Line 72: Line 109:


Dually, just as the complement of a nowhere dense set need not be open, but has a dense [[Interior (topology)|interior]] (contains a dense open set), a comeagre set need not be a [[Gδ set|<math>G_{\delta}</math> set]] (countable intersection of [[Open set|open]] sets), but contains a dense <math>G_{\delta}</math> set formed from dense open sets.
Dually, just as the complement of a nowhere dense set need not be open, but has a dense [[Interior (topology)|interior]] (contains a dense open set), a comeagre set need not be a [[Gδ set|<math>G_{\delta}</math> set]] (countable intersection of [[Open set|open]] sets), but contains a dense <math>G_{\delta}</math> set formed from dense open sets.

==Examples==

The empty set is a meagre subset of every topological space.

In the nonmeagre space <math>X=[0,1]\cup([2,3]\cap\Q)</math> the set <math>[2,3]\cap\Q</math> is meagre. The set <math>[0,1]</math> is nonmeagre and comeagre.

In the nonmeagre space <math>X=[0,2]</math> the set <math>[0,1]</math> is nonmeagre. But it is not comeagre, as its complement <math>(1,2]</math> is also nonmeagre.

A countable [[T1 space|T<sub>1</sub> space]] without [[isolated point]] is meagre. So it is also meagre in any space that contains it as a subspace. For example, <math>\Q</math> is both a meagre subspace of <math>\R</math> (that is, meagre in itself with the subspace topology induced from <math>\R</math>) and a meagre subset of <math>\R.</math>

The [[Cantor set]] is nowhere dense in <math>\R</math> and hence meagre in <math>\R.</math> But it is nonmeagre in itself, since it is a complete metric space.

The line <math>\R\times\{0\}</math> is meagre in the plane <math>\R^2.</math> But it is a nonmeagre subspace, that is, it is nonmeagre in itself.

The space <math>(\Q \times \Q) \cup (\R\times\{0\})</math> (with the topology induced from <math>\R^2</math>) is meagre. Its meagre subset <math>\R\times\{0\}</math> is nonmeagre in itself.

There is a subset <math>H</math> of the real numbers <math>\R</math> that splits every nonempty open set into two nonmeagre sets. That is, for every nonempty open set <math>U\subseteq \mathbb{R}</math>, the sets <math>U\cap H</math> and <math>U \setminus H</math> are both nonmeagre.

In the space <math>C([0,1])</math> of continuous real-valued functions on <math>[0,1]</math> with the topology of [[uniform convergence]], the set <math>A</math> of continuous real-valued functions on <math>[0,1]</math> that have a derivative at some point is meagre.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Banach, S.|title=Über die Baire'sche Kategorie gewisser Funktionenmengen|journal=Studia Math.|volume=3|issue=1|year=1931|pages=174–179|doi=10.4064/sm-3-1-174-179|url=https://eudml.org/doc/217560|doi-access=free}}</ref>{{sfn|Willard|2004|loc=Theorem 25.5}} Since <math>C([0,1])</math> is a complete metric space, it is nonmeagre. So the complement of <math>A</math>, which consists of the continuous real-valued [[nowhere differentiable function]]s on <math>[0,1],</math> is comeagre and nonmeagre. In particular that set is not empty. This is one way to show the existence of continuous nowhere differentiable functions.


==Banach–Mazur game==
==Banach–Mazur game==
Line 104: Line 121:
For any <math>\mathcal{W}</math> meeting the above criteria, player <math>Q</math> has a [[winning strategy]] if and only if <math>X</math> is meagre.
For any <math>\mathcal{W}</math> meeting the above criteria, player <math>Q</math> has a [[winning strategy]] if and only if <math>X</math> is meagre.
}}
}}
==Erdos–Sierpinski duality==
Many arguments about meagre sets also apply to [[null set|null sets]], i.e. sets of Lebesgue measure 0. The Erdos–Sierpinski duality theorem states that if the [[continuum hypothesis]] holds, there is an [[Involution_(mathematics)|involution]] from reals to reals where the image of a null set of reals is a meagre set, and vice versa.<ref>{{Cite arXiv|last=Quintanilla|first=M.|eprint=2206.10754|title=The real numbers in inner models of set theory|date=2022}} (p.25)</ref> In fact, the image of a set of reals under the map is null if and only if the original set was meagre, and vice versa.<ref>S. Saito, [https://www.artsci.kyushu-u.ac.jp/~ssaito/eng/maths/duality.pdf The Erdos-Sierpinski Duality Theorem], notes. Accessed 18 January 2023.</ref>


==See also==
==See also==


* {{annotated link|Baire category theorem}}
* {{annotated link|Baire space}}
* {{annotated link|Barrelled space}}
* {{annotated link|Barrelled space}}
* {{annotated link|Generic property}}, for analogs to residual
* {{annotated link|Generic property}}, for analogs to residual
* {{annotated link|Negligible set}}, for analogs to meagre
* {{annotated link|Negligible set}}, for analogs to meagre
* {{annotated link|Nowhere dense set}}
* {{annotated link|Property of Baire}}
* {{annotated link|Property of Baire}}


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* {{Narici Beckenstein Topological Vector Spaces|edition=2}} <!-- {{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|p=}} -->
* {{Narici Beckenstein Topological Vector Spaces|edition=2}} <!-- {{sfn|Narici|Beckenstein|2011|p=}} -->
* {{Bourbaki General Topology Part II Chapters 5-10}} <!--{{sfn|Bourbaki|1989|p=}}-->
* {{Bourbaki General Topology Part II Chapters 5-10}} <!--{{sfn|Bourbaki|1989|p=}}-->
* {{cite book| last = Oxtoby| first = John C.| title = Measure and Category| publisher = Springer Verlag| year = 1980}}
* {{cite book|last=Oxtoby|first=John C.|title=Measure and Category|chapter=The Banach Category Theorem|location=New York|publisher=Springer|edition=Second|year=1980|isbn=0-387-90508-1|chapter-url={{Google books|plainurl=yes|id=wUDjoT5xIFAC|page=62}}|pages=62–65}}
* {{Rudin Walter Functional Analysis|edition=2}} <!-- {{sfn|Rudin|1991|p=}} -->
* {{Rudin Walter Functional Analysis|edition=2}} <!-- {{sfn|Rudin|1991|p=}} -->
* {{Willard General Topology}} <!--{{sfn|Willard|2004|p=}}-->
* {{Willard General Topology}} <!--{{sfn|Willard|2004|p=}}-->

Latest revision as of 06:38, 2 July 2024

In the mathematical field of general topology, a meagre set (also called a meager set or a set of first category) is a subset of a topological space that is small or negligible in a precise sense detailed below. A set that is not meagre is called nonmeagre, or of the second category. See below for definitions of other related terms.

The meagre subsets of a fixed space form a σ-ideal of subsets; that is, any subset of a meagre set is meagre, and the union of countably many meagre sets is meagre.

Meagre sets play an important role in the formulation of the notion of Baire space and of the Baire category theorem, which is used in the proof of several fundamental results of functional analysis.

Definitions

[edit]

Throughout, will be a topological space.

The definition of meagre set uses the notion of a nowhere dense subset of that is, a subset of whose closure has empty interior. See the corresponding article for more details.

A subset of is called meagre in a meagre subset of or of the first category in if it is a countable union of nowhere dense subsets of .[1] Otherwise, the subset is called nonmeagre in a nonmeagre subset of or of the second category in [1] The qualifier "in " can be omitted if the ambient space is fixed and understood from context.

A topological space is called meagre (respectively, nonmeagre) if it is a meagre (respectively, nonmeagre) subset of itself.

A subset of is called comeagre in oder residual in if its complement is meagre in . (This use of the prefix "co" is consistent with its use in other terms such as "cofinite".) A subset is comeagre in if and only if it is equal to a countable intersection of sets, each of whose interior is dense in

Remarks on terminology

The notions of nonmeagre and comeagre should not be confused. If the space is meagre, every subset is both meagre and comeagre, and there are no nonmeagre sets. If the space is nonmeager, no set is at the same time meagre and comeager, every comeagre set is nonmeagre, and there can be nonmeagre sets that are not comeagre, that is, with nonmeagre complement. See the Examples section below.

As an additional point of terminology, if a subset of a topological space is given the subspace topology induced from , one can talk about it being a meagre space, namely being a meagre subset of itself (when considered as a topological space in its own right). In this case can also be called a meagre subspace of , meaning a meagre space when given the subspace topology. Importantly, this is not the same as being meagre in the whole space . (See the Properties and Examples sections below for the relationship between the two.) Similarly, a nonmeagre subspace will be a set that is nonmeagre in itself, which is not the same as being nonmeagre in the whole space. Be aware however that in the context of topological vector spaces some authors may use the phrase "meagre/nonmeagre subspace" to mean a vector subspace that is a meagre/nonmeagre set relative to the whole space.[2]

The terms first category and second category were the original ones used by René Baire in his thesis of 1899.[3] The meagre terminology was introduced by Bourbaki in 1948.[4][5]

Examples

[edit]

The empty set is always a closed nowhere dense (and thus meagre) subset of every topological space.

In the nonmeagre space the set is meagre. The set is nonmeagre and comeagre.

In the nonmeagre space the set is nonmeagre. But it is not comeagre, as its complement is also nonmeagre.

A countable T1 space without isolated point is meagre. So it is also meagre in any space that contains it as a subspace. For example, is both a meagre subspace of (that is, meagre in itself with the subspace topology induced from ) and a meagre subset of

The Cantor set is nowhere dense in and hence meagre in But it is nonmeagre in itself, since it is a complete metric space.

The set is not nowhere dense in , but it is meagre in . It is nonmeagre in itself (since as a subspace it contains an isolated point).

The line is meagre in the plane But it is a nonmeagre subspace, that is, it is nonmeagre in itself.

The set is a meagre subset of even though its meagre subset is a nonmeagre subspace (that is, is not a meagre topological space).[6] A countable Hausdorff space without isolated points is meagre, whereas any topological space that contains an isolated point is nonmeagre.[6] Because the rational numbers are countable, they are meagre as a subset of the reals and as a space—that is, they do not form a Baire space.

Any topological space that contains an isolated point is nonmeagre[6] (because no set containing the isolated point can be nowhere dense). In particular, every nonempty discrete space is nonmeagre.

There is a subset of the real numbers that splits every nonempty open set into two nonmeagre sets. That is, for every nonempty open set , the sets and are both nonmeagre.

In the space of continuous real-valued functions on with the topology of uniform convergence, the set of continuous real-valued functions on that have a derivative at some point is meagre.[7][8] Since is a complete metric space, it is nonmeagre. So the complement of , which consists of the continuous real-valued nowhere differentiable functions on is comeagre and nonmeagre. In particular that set is not empty. This is one way to show the existence of continuous nowhere differentiable functions.

On an infinite-dimensional Banach, there exists a discontinuous linear functional whose kernel is nonmeagre.[9] Also, under Martin's axiom, on each separable Banach space, there exists a discontinuous linear functional whose kernel is meagre (this statement disproves the Wilansky–Klee conjecture[10]).[9]

Characterizations and sufficient conditions

[edit]

Every nonempty Baire space is nonmeagre. In particular, by the Baire category theorem every nonempty complete metric space and every nonempty locally compact Hausdorff space is nonmeagre.

Every nonempty Baire space is nonmeagre but there exist nonmeagre spaces that are not Baire spaces.[6] Since complete (pseudo)metric spaces as well as Hausdorff locally compact spaces are Baire spaces, they are also nonmeagre spaces.[6]

Any subset of a meagre set is a meagre set, as is the union of countably many meagre sets.[11] If is a homeomorphism then a subset is meagre if and only if is meagre.[11]

Every nowhere dense subset is a meagre set.[11] Consequently, any closed subset of whose interior in is empty is of the first category of (that is, it is a meager subset of ).

The Banach category theorem[12] states that in any space the union of any family of open sets of the first category is of the first category.

All subsets and all countable unions of meagre sets are meagre. Thus the meagre subsets of a fixed space form a σ-ideal of subsets, a suitable notion of negligible set. Dually, all supersets and all countable intersections of comeagre sets are comeagre. Every superset of a nonmeagre set is nonmeagre.

Suppose where has the subspace topology induced from The set may be meagre in without being meagre in However the following results hold:[5]

  • If is meagre in then is meagre in
  • If is open in then is meagre in if and only if is meagre in
  • If is dense in then is meagre in if and only if is meagre in

And correspondingly for nonmeagre sets:

  • If is nonmeagre in then is nonmeagre in
  • If is open in then is nonmeagre in if and only if is nonmeagre in
  • If is dense in then is nonmeagre in if and only if is nonmeagre in

In particular, every subset of that is meagre in itself is meagre in Every subset of that is nonmeagre in is nonmeagre in itself. And for an open set or a dense set in being meagre in is equivalent to being meagre in itself, and similarly for the nonmeagre property.

A topological space is nonmeagre if and only if every countable intersection of dense open sets in is nonempty.[13]

Properties

[edit]

A nonmeagre locally convex topological vector space is a barreled space.[6]

Every nowhere dense subset of is meagre. Consequently, any closed subset with empty interior is meagre. Thus a closed subset of that is of the second category in must have non-empty interior in [14] (because otherwise it would be nowhere dense and thus of the first category).

If is of the second category in and if are subsets of such that then at least one is of the second category in

Meagre subsets and Lebesgue measure

[edit]

There exist nowhere dense subsets (which are thus meagre subsets) that have positive Lebesgue measure.[6]

A meagre set in need not have Lebesgue measure zero, and can even have full measure. For example, in the interval fat Cantor sets, like the Smith–Volterra–Cantor set, are closed nowhere dense and they can be constructed with a measure arbitrarily close to The union of a countable number of such sets with measure approaching gives a meagre subset of with measure [15]

Dually, there can be nonmeagre sets with measure zero. The complement of any meagre set of measure in (for example the one in the previous paragraph) has measure and is comeagre in and hence nonmeagre in since is a Baire space.

Here is another example of a nonmeagre set in with measure : where is a sequence that enumerates the rational numbers.

Relation to Borel hierarchy

[edit]

Just as a nowhere dense subset need not be closed, but is always contained in a closed nowhere dense subset (viz, its closure), a meagre set need not be an set (countable union of closed sets), but is always contained in an set made from nowhere dense sets (by taking the closure of each set).

Dually, just as the complement of a nowhere dense set need not be open, but has a dense interior (contains a dense open set), a comeagre set need not be a set (countable intersection of open sets), but contains a dense set formed from dense open sets.

Banach–Mazur game

[edit]

Meagre sets have a useful alternative characterization in terms of the Banach–Mazur game. Let be a topological space, be a family of subsets of that have nonempty interiors such that every nonempty open set has a subset belonging to and be any subset of Then there is a Banach–Mazur game In the Banach–Mazur game, two players, and alternately choose successively smaller elements of to produce a sequence Player wins if the intersection of this sequence contains a point in ; otherwise, player wins.

Theorem — For any meeting the above criteria, player has a winning strategy if and only if is meagre.

Erdos–Sierpinski duality

[edit]

Many arguments about meagre sets also apply to null sets, i.e. sets of Lebesgue measure 0. The Erdos–Sierpinski duality theorem states that if the continuum hypothesis holds, there is an involution from reals to reals where the image of a null set of reals is a meagre set, and vice versa.[16] In fact, the image of a set of reals under the map is null if and only if the original set was meagre, and vice versa.[17]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Narici & Beckenstein 2011, p. 389.
  2. ^ Schaefer, Helmut H. (1966). "Topological Vector Spaces". Macmillan.
  3. ^ Baire, René (1899). "Sur les fonctions de variables réelles". Annali di Mat. Pura ed Appl. 3: 1–123., page 65
  4. ^ Oxtoby, J. (1961). "Cartesian products of Baire spaces" (PDF). Fundamenta Mathematicae. 49 (2): 157–166. doi:10.4064/fm-49-2-157-166."Following Bourbaki [...], a topological space is called a Baire space if ..."
  5. ^ a b Bourbaki 1989, p. 192.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Narici & Beckenstein 2011, pp. 371–423.
  7. ^ Banach, S. (1931). "Über die Baire'sche Kategorie gewisser Funktionenmengen". Studia Math. 3 (1): 174–179. doi:10.4064/sm-3-1-174-179.
  8. ^ Willard 2004, Theorem 25.5.
  9. ^ a b https://mathoverflow.net/questions/3188/are-proper-linear-subspaces-of-banach-spaces-always-meager
  10. ^ https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1966-72-04/S0002-9904-1966-11547-1/S0002-9904-1966-11547-1.pdf
  11. ^ a b c Rudin 1991, p. 43.
  12. ^ Oxtoby 1980, p. 62.
  13. ^ Willard 2004, Theorem 25.2.
  14. ^ Rudin 1991, pp. 42–43.
  15. ^ "Is there a measure zero set which isn't meagre?". MathOverflow.
  16. ^ Quintanilla, M. (2022). "The real numbers in inner models of set theory". arXiv:2206.10754. (p.25)
  17. ^ S. Saito, The Erdos-Sierpinski Duality Theorem, notes. Accessed 18 January 2023.

Bibliography

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