If $K : D(K)\to Y $
is a continuous one-to-one operator and $C$ is a subspace and $D(K)$ is a compact set, then the inverse operator $(K\mid C)^{-1}$ is continuous? Here, $K\mid C$ denotes the restriction of $K$ to $C$ and $D(K)$ is the domain of $K$.
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You might be looking for this one: Let $f:C\to R(f)$ be a continuous bijection from a compact $C$ to a Hausdorff space, then it is a homeomorphism. See: https://proofwiki.org/wiki/Continuous_Bijection_from_Compact_to_Hausdorff_is_Homeomorphism ā Berci Mar 26 '17 at 22:10
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1What is the question here? I only see a statement. ā Tommi Mar 27 '17 at 07:58
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inverse operator is continuous? ā Parisa Mar 27 '17 at 22:50
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Let $f:CāR(f)$ be a continuous bijection from a compact $C$ to a Hausdorff space, then it is a homeomorphism.
https://proofwiki.org/wiki/Continuous_Bijection_from_Compact_to_Hausdorff_is_Homeomorphism
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