Since
holomorphic functions are much more rigid than
smooth functions, the theories of
smooth and complex manifolds have very different flavors:
compact complex manifolds are much closer to
algebraic varieties than to differentiable manifolds. In particular, while complex manifolds and complex-analytic manifolds are the same,
smooth manifolds and
real-analytic manifolds are not the same. For example, the
Whitney embedding theorem tells us that every smooth
n-dimensional manifold can be
embedded as a smooth submanifold of
R2
n, whereas it is "rare" for a complex manifold to have a holomorphic embedding into
Cn. Consider for example any
compact connected complex manifold
M: any holomorphic function on it is constant by
the maximum modulus principle. Now if we had a holomorphic embedding of
M into
Cn, then the coordinate functions of
Cn would restrict to nonconstant holomorphic functions on
M, contradicting compactness, except in the case that
M is just a point. Complex manifolds that can be embedded in
Cn are called
Stein manifolds and form a very special class of manifolds including, for example, smooth complex affine algebraic varieties. The classification of complex manifolds is much more subtle than that of differentiable manifolds. For example, while in dimensions other than four, a given topological manifold has at most finitely many
smooth structures, a topological manifold supporting a complex structure can and often does support uncountably many complex structures.
Riemann surfaces, two dimensional manifolds equipped with a complex structure, which are topologically classified by the
genus, are an important example of this phenomenon. The set of complex structures on a given orientable surface, modulo biholomorphic equivalence, itself forms a complex algebraic variety called a
moduli space, the structure of which remains an area of active research. Since the transition maps between charts are biholomorphic, complex manifolds are, in particular, smooth and canonically oriented (not just
orientable: a biholomorphic map to (a subset of)
Cn gives an orientation, as biholomorphic maps are orientation-preserving). ==Examples of complex manifolds==