I know that in metric spaces, compact set are set such that every sequence has a convergent subsequence. As a surprising fact of a question I asked here, in infinite dimension, balls are not compact.
1) So how looks compact sets in infinite dimension normed space ? I guess that they must be at least closed (since convergent sequence must converge in the set). But in other way, unit ball is closed (and bounded), thus maybe compact set are not closed. So how do they look ?
2) In weak topology, I know that since there are less open set, there are more compact set. But if there are less open set, necessarily there are less closed set, right ? And thus, it has less compact set, no ? If compact set are at least not closed, what could be there interest ?