Would you mind proposing the additional text for the comments to those
definitions?
I can then help doing the actual changes in set.mm if needed.
I think you should adapt your *EEhil* (and RR^) definition so that the topology and uniform structure are generated from the distance. Currently and unless I'm mistaken (the definitions are sometimes a little confusing) I think they are independent. It will allow to speak of EEhil as a Hilbert space with a standard norm defined from the inner product, a standard distance defined from the norm, a uniform structure defined from the distance, and a standard topology defined from the uniform structure.
The former message must be read this way. (Modifications marked by two stars.)I think you should adapt your *EEhil* (and RR^) definition so that the topology and uniform structure are generated from the distance. Currently and unless I'm mistaken (the definitions are sometimes a little confusing) I think they are independent. It will allow to speak of EEhil as a Hilbert space with a standard norm defined from the inner product, a standard distance defined from the norm, a uniform structure defined from the distance, and a standard topology defined from the uniform structure.
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I still think that the order of definitions should be:
Hi Thierry,I missed the fact that the topology is defined from the distance by toNrmGrp.I still think that the order of definitions should be:
(1) The distance is defined from the norm. (2) The uniform structure is defined from the distance.(3) The topology is defined from the uniform structure.
We should adopt this order for all spaces where there are combined norms, metrics, uniform structures, topologies, regardless of the level of generality of the spaces, for the sake of homogeneity.*(a) It bothers me that the norm is defined by distance. (Even if in this case, this is possible. But only because there is a zero.) **(b) There may be a shortcut for topologies defined in terms of distances by bypassing uniform structures. But it bothers me too. *
*The reason is that there is a problem of generality in (a) and (b).*