Since poles are isolated, there are at most
countably many for a meromorphic function. The set of poles can be infinite, as exemplified by the function f(z) = \csc z = \frac{1}{\sin z}. By using
analytic continuation to eliminate
removable singularities, meromorphic functions can be added, subtracted, multiplied, and the quotient f/g can be formed unless g(z) = 0 on a
connected component of
D. Thus, if
D is connected, the meromorphic functions form a
field, in fact a
field extension of the
complex numbers.
Higher dimensions In
several complex variables, a meromorphic function is defined to be locally a quotient of two holomorphic functions. For example, f(z_1, z_2) = z_1 / z_2 is a meromorphic function on the two-dimensional complex affine space. Here it is no longer true that every meromorphic function can be regarded as a holomorphic function with values in the
Riemann sphere: There is a set of "indeterminacy" of
codimension two (in the given example this set consists of the origin (0, 0)). Unlike in dimension one, in higher dimensions there do exist compact
complex manifolds on which there are no non-constant meromorphic functions, for example, most
complex tori. ==Examples==