Set $X$ be a scheme and $Y \subset X$ a closed subscheme given locally by ideal sheaf $I \subset \mathcal{O}_X$.
Then there exist formalism constructing from pair $(Y,I)$ the induced formal scheme $\hat{X}$ along $Y$ as follows:
For affine $Spec(A) := U \subset X$ define $\widehat{U}_Y:= Spec \varprojlim_n A/I^n= \varinjlim_n Spec(A/I^n)$.
This gives $(\widehat{X},\mathcal{O}_{\widehat{X}})$. Take into account that topologically $\widehat{X}=Y$.
Two questions:
Locally, by construction the affine pieces of $\widehat{X}$ are completions with respect to the ideal $I$. Why is it then that the stalks $\mathcal{O}_{\widehat{X},x}$ in general not complete? (see comment at page 1 from: https://www.uni-due.de/~mat903/sem/ws0809/material/Minicourse_FormalGeometry.pdf)
Could anybody tell me what is the philosophic meaning of this formal scheme and it's main application in Grothendieck's (generalized) algebraic geometry considering not more only analytic spaces/varieties but passing to general base scheme $X \to S$?
My intuition is that one wants to study what happens "locally" in analytic sense (so with a topology which allows to stydy infinisesimal bahavior like in case of real of complex fields) since the Zariski topo is just to coarse.
Could anybody sumarize (if my intuition is correct) the most important resuls from study of real/complex analytic spaces which can be "transfered" with this concept of formal scheme to (algebraic) algebraic geometry :) in appropriate way?
I think that the goal mith be that if one have some strong theorems in classical analytic geometry (so study of analytic spaces in complex algebraic geometry) there might be possible to develop techniques as given in this "formal scheme" concept allows looking for a analog/similar statement for general schemes/ sheaves over arbitrary ring or field.
Looking throught the linked paper above one nice example for such correspondent result is 2.3.3 Corollary: Theorem on formal functions.
Are there more?