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Filters in topology, a subfield of mathematics, can be used to study topological spaces and define all basic topological notions such a convergence, continuity, compactness, and more. Filters, which are special families of subsets of some given set, also provide a common framework for defining various types of limits of functions such as limits from the left/right, to infinity, to a point or a set, and many others. Special types of filters called ultrafilters have many useful technical properties and they may often be used in place of arbitrary filters.

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  • Filters in topology, a subfield of mathematics, can be used to study topological spaces and define all basic topological notions such a convergence, continuity, compactness, and more. Filters, which are special families of subsets of some given set, also provide a common framework for defining various types of limits of functions such as limits from the left/right, to infinity, to a point or a set, and many others. Special types of filters called ultrafilters have many useful technical properties and they may often be used in place of arbitrary filters. Filters have generalizations called prefilters (also known as filter bases) and filter subbases, all of which appear naturally and repeatedly throughout topology. Examples include neighborhood filters/bases/subbases and uniformities. Every filter is a prefilter and both are filter subbases. Every prefilter and filter subbase is contained in a unique smallest filter, which they are said to generate. This establishes a relationship between filters and prefilters that may often be exploited to allow one to use whichever of these two notions is more technically convenient. There is a certain preorder on families of sets, denoted by that helps to determine exactly when and how one notion (filter, prefilter, etc.) can or cannot be used in place of another. This preorder's importance is amplified by the fact that it also defines the notion of filter convergence, where by definition, a filter (or prefilter) converges to a point if and only if where is that point's neighborhood filter. Consequently, subordination also plays an important role in many concepts that are related to convergence, such as and limits of functions. In addition, the relation which denotes and is expressed by saying that is subordinate to also establishes a relationship in which is to as a subsequence is to a sequence (that is, the relation which is called subordination, is for filters the analog of "is a subsequence of"). Filters were introduced by Henri Cartan in 1937 and subsequently used by Bourbaki in their book Topologie Générale as an alternative to the similar notion of a net developed in 1922 by E. H. Moore and H. L. Smith. Filters can also be used to characterize the notions of sequence and net convergence. But unlike sequence and net convergence, filter convergence is defined entirely in terms of subsets of the topological space and so it provides a notion of convergence that is completely intrinsic to the topological space; indeed, the category of topological spaces can be equivalently defined entirely in terms of filters. Every net induces a canonical filter and dually, every filter induces a canonical net, where this induced net (resp. induced filter) converges to a point if and only if the same is true of the original filter (resp. net). This characterization also holds for many other definitions such as cluster points. These relationships make it possible to switch between filters and nets, and they often also allow one to choose whichever of these two notions (filter or net) is more convenient for the problem at hand. However, assuming that "subnet" is defined using either of its most popular definitions (which are those and ), then in general, this relationship does not extend to subordinate filters and subnets because as , there exist subordinate filters whose filter/subordinate–filter relationship cannot be described in terms of the corresponding net/subnet relationship; this issue can however be resolved by using a less commonly encountered definition of "subnet", which is that of an . Thus filters/prefilters and this single preorder provide a framework that seamlessly ties together fundamental topological concepts such as topological spaces (via neighborhood filters), neighborhood bases, , , continuity, compactness, sequences (via ), the filter equivalent of "subsequence" (subordination), uniform spaces, and more; concepts that otherwise seem relatively disparate and whose relationships are less clear. (en)
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  • If is a prefilter on and then is a cluster point of if and only if is a cluster point of (en)
  • If is an ultrafilter on then the following are equivalent: is fixed, or equivalently, not free, meaning is principal, meaning Some element of is a finite set. Some element of is a singleton set. is principal at some point of which means does contain the Fréchet filter on is sequential. (en)
  • If is a filter on a compact space is the set of cluster points of then every neighborhood of belongs to Thus a filter on a compact Hausdorff space converges if and only if it has a single cluster point. (en)
  • Let be a prefilter on and let Suppose is a prefilter such that If * This is the analog of "if a sequence converges to then so does every subsequence." If is a cluster point of then is a cluster point of * This is the analog of "if is a cluster point of some subsequence, then is a cluster point of the original sequence." if and only if for any finer prefilter there exists some even more fine prefilter such that * This is the analog of "a sequence converges to if and only if every subsequence has a sub–subsequence that converges to " is a cluster point of if and only if there exists some finer prefilter such that * This is the analog of the following statement: " is a cluster point of a sequence if and only if it has a subsequence that converges to " . * The analog for sequences is false since there is a Hausdorff topology on and a sequence in this space that clusters at but that also does not have any subsequence that converges to (en)
  • Every filter on a set is a subset of some ultrafilter on (en)
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  • Theorem (en)
  • Proposition (en)
  • The ultrafilter lemma/principal/theorem (en)
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  • Recall that and that if is a net in then and is a cluster point of if and only if is a cluster point of By using it follows that It also follows that is a cluster point of if and only if is a cluster point of if and only if is a cluster point of (en)
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  • Proof (en)
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  • Filters in topology, a subfield of mathematics, can be used to study topological spaces and define all basic topological notions such a convergence, continuity, compactness, and more. Filters, which are special families of subsets of some given set, also provide a common framework for defining various types of limits of functions such as limits from the left/right, to infinity, to a point or a set, and many others. Special types of filters called ultrafilters have many useful technical properties and they may often be used in place of arbitrary filters. (en)
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  • Filters in topology (en)
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