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The Riemann integral for vector-valued functions can be defined in the same way as for scalar-valued functions. Moreover, the theory of the so-defined integral is rather similar to the classical one. In particular, any continuous function with values in a Banach space is Riemann integrable, and the fundamental theorem of calculus remains valid. The theory of Riemann integration for functions with values in a normed, not complete, space would not be so elegant.
This Chapter covers optional Calculus topics such as the Fubini Theorem, Riemann Integration, the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, Integration by Parts, Mean Value Theorem, and Absolute Continuity.
Often it is more instructive to know 'what can go wrong' and to understand 'why a result fails' than to plod through yet another piece of theory. In this text, the authors gather more than 300 counterexamples - some of them both surprising and amusing - showing the limitations, hidden traps and pitfalls of measure and integration. Many examples are put into context, explaining relevant parts of the theory, and pointing out further reading. The text starts with a self-contained, non-technical overview on the fundamentals of measure and integration. A companion to the successful undergraduate textbook Measures, Integrals and Martingales, it is accessible to advanced undergraduate students, requiring only modest prerequisites. More specialized concepts are summarized at the beginning of each chapter, allowing for self-study as well as supplementary reading for any course covering measures and integrals. For researchers, it provides ample examples and warnings as to the limitations of general measure theory. This book forms a sister volume to René Schilling's other book Measures, Integrals and Martingales (www.cambridge.org/9781316620243).
Approximations for the Stieltjes integral with (φ,Φ)-Lipschitzian integrators are given. Applications for the Riemann integral of a product and for the generalized trapezoid and Ostrowski inequalities are also provided.
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