I'm trying to characterize the path-connected subsets of the compact complement topology over $\mathbb{R}$ (let's call $X$ this topological space).
I have already proved the connected subsets are the intervals (so, in particular, the whole space is connected) and the unbounded ones. As the compact complement topology is coarser than the usual topology on $\mathbb{R}$, I already know every path-connected subset of $\mathbb{R}$ is a path-connected subset of $X$, so every interval is a path-connected subset of $X$. If there were others, they would be connected,so they would be unbounded. However, as the unit interval cannot be decomposed in a denumerable quantity of disjoint, nonempty closed sets, we know a denumerable subset of $X$ is never path-connected, even if it is connected.
So, my question is, are all uncountable unbounded sets of $X$ path connected? It doesn't seem so, but I don't know the correct way of reasoning about these things. For example, $(-\infty,-1)\cup[0,1]\cup(2,\infty)$ doesn't seem path connected, while $(-\infty,-1)\cup(2,\infty)$ does. But this is just an intuition, as I don't really know hwo to work properly with functions that end in this space.