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Banach game

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, the Banach game is a topological game introduced by Stefan Banach in 1935 in the second addendum to problem 43 of the Scottish book as a variation of the Banach–Mazur game.[1]

Given a subset of real numbers, two players alternatively write down arbitrary (not necessarily in ) positive real numbers such that Player one wins if and only if exists and is in .[2]

One observation about the game is that if is a countable set, then either of the players can cause the final sum to avoid the set.[3] Thus in this situation the second player has a winning strategy.

References

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  1. ^ Mauldin, R. Daniel (April 1981). The Scottish Book: Mathematics from the Scottish Cafe (1 ed.). Birkhäuser. p. 113. ISBN 978-3-7643-3045-3.
  2. ^ Telgársky, Rastislav (Spring 1987). "Topological Games: On the 50th Anniversary of the Banach–Mazur Game" (PDF). Rocky Mountain Journal of Mathematics. 17 (2): 227–276. at 242.
  3. ^ Mauldin 1981, p. 116.

Further reading

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