Is that true? I thought countable sets have measure 0. They definitely have dimension 0.
Not that familiar with measure theory, however.
Maybe I mean dimension rather than measure.
EDIT: Maybe that is Hausdorff dimension and not necessarily true for topological dimension. I have seen some definitions of dimension that have dim(
Q) = 1, but that has Hausdorff dimension of 0. A vector space over
Q can be 1 dimensional too.
EDIT2: OK, after some more research, it seems the Lebesgue measure of any countable set is 0 also
With respect to
Rn, all 1-point sets are null, and therefore all countable sets are null. In particular, the set
Q of rational numbers is a null set, despite being dense in
R.
Null set = set of Lebesgue measure 0
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Null_set
EDIT3: Obviously, any integral over a single point is going to be zero anyway, easily seen from the definition of an integral.