• In any space, the interior of the
empty set is the empty set. • In any space X, if S \subseteq X, then \operatorname{int} S \subseteq S. • If X is the
real line \Reals (with the standard topology), then \operatorname{int} ([0, 1]) = (0, 1) whereas the interior of the set \Q of
rational numbers is empty: \operatorname{int} \Q = \varnothing. • If X is the
complex plane \Complex, then \operatorname{int} (\{z \in \Complex : |z| \leq 1\}) = \{z \in \Complex : |z| • In any
Euclidean space, the interior of any
finite set is the empty set. On the set of
real numbers, one can put other topologies rather than the standard one: • If X is the real numbers \Reals with the
lower limit topology, then \operatorname{int} ([0, 1]) = [0, 1). • If one considers on \Reals the topology in which
every set is open, then \operatorname{int} ([0, 1]) = [0, 1]. • If one considers on \Reals the topology in which the only open sets are the empty set and \Reals itself, then \operatorname{int} ([0, 1]) is the empty set. These examples show that the interior of a set depends upon the topology of the underlying space. The last two examples are special cases of the following. • In any
discrete space, since every set is open, every set is equal to its interior. • In any
indiscrete space X, since the only open sets are the empty set and X itself, \operatorname{int} X = X and for every
proper subset S of X, \operatorname{int} S is the empty set. ==Properties==