Every topological ring is a
topological group (with respect to addition) and hence a
uniform space in a natural manner. One can thus ask whether a given topological ring R is
complete. If it is not, then it can be
completed: one can find an essentially unique complete topological ring S that contains R as a
dense subring such that the given topology on R equals the
subspace topology arising from S. If the starting ring R is metric, the ring S can be constructed as a set of equivalence classes of
Cauchy sequences in R, this equivalence relation makes the ring S Hausdorff and using constant sequences (which are Cauchy) one realizes a (uniformly) continuous morphism (CM in the sequel) c : R \to S such that, for all CM f : R \to T where T is Hausdorff and complete, there exists a unique CM g : S \to T such that f = g \circ c. If R is not metric (as, for instance, the ring of all real-variable rational valued functions, that is, all functions f : \R \to \Q endowed with the topology of pointwise convergence) the standard construction uses minimal Cauchy filters and satisfies the same universal property as above (see
Bourbaki, General Topology, III.6.5). The rings of
formal power series and the
p-adic integers are most naturally defined as completions of certain topological rings carrying
I-adic topologies. ==Topological fields==