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===Inclusionâexclusion principle=== If ''M'' and ''N'' are any two topological spaces, then the Euler characteristic of their [[disjoint union]] is the sum of their Euler characteristics, since homology is additive under disjoint union: :<math>\chi(M \sqcup N) = \chi(M) + \chi(N).</math> More generally, if ''M'' and ''N'' are subspaces of a larger space ''X'', then so are their union and intersection. In some cases, the Euler characteristic obeys a version of the [[inclusionâexclusion principle]]: :<math>\chi(M \cup N) = \chi(M) + \chi(N) - \chi(M \cap N).</math> This is true in the following cases: *if ''M'' and ''N'' are an [[excisive couple]]. In particular, if the [[interior (topology)|interiors]] of ''M'' and ''N'' inside the union still cover the union.<ref>Edwin Spanier: Algebraic Topology, Springer 1966, p. 205.</ref> *if ''X'' is a [[locally compact space]], and one uses Euler characteristics with [[compact space|compact]] [[support (mathematics)|supports]], no assumptions on ''M'' or ''N'' are needed. *if ''X'' is a [[topologically stratified space|stratified space]] all of whose strata are even-dimensional, the inclusionâexclusion principle holds if ''M'' and ''N'' are unions of strata. This applies in particular if ''M'' and ''N'' are subvarieties of a [[complex number|complex]] [[algebraic variety]].<ref>William Fulton: Introduction to toric varieties, 1993, Princeton University Press, p. 141.</ref> In general, the inclusionâexclusion principle is false. A [[counterexample]] is given by taking ''X'' to be the [[real line]], ''M'' a [[subset]] consisting of one point and ''N'' the [[complement (set theory)|complement]] of ''M''.
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