In mathematics, the regulated integral is a definition of integration for regulated functions, which are defined to be uniform limits of step functions. The use of the regulated integral instead of the Riemann integral has been advocated by Nicolas Bourbaki and Jean Dieudonné.
Let [a, b] be a fixed closed, bounded interval in the real line R. A real-valued function à: [a, b] â R is called a step function if there exists a finite partition
of [a, b] such that àis constant on each open interval (t<sub>i</sub>, t<sub>i+1</sub>) of à; suppose that this constant value is c<sub>i</sub> â R. Then, define the integral of a step function àto be
It can be shown that this definition is independent of the choice of partition, in that if ÃÂ <sub>1</sub> is another partition of [a, b] such that ÃÂ is constant on the open intervals of ÃÂ <sub>1</sub>, then the numerical value of the integral of ÃÂ is the same for ÃÂ <sub>1</sub> as for ÃÂ .
A function f : [a, b] â R is called a regulated function if it is the uniform limit of a sequence of step functions on [a, b]:
Define the integral of a regulated function f to be
where (ÃÂ<sub>n</sub>)<sub>nâÂÂN</sub> is any sequence of step functions that converges uniformly to f.
One must check that this limit exists and is independent of the chosen sequence, but this is an immediate consequence of the continuous linear extension theorem of elementary functional analysis: a bounded linear operator T<sub>0</sub> defined on a dense linear subspace E<sub>0</sub> of a normed linear space E and taking values in a Banach space F extends uniquely to a bounded linear operator T : E â F with the same (finite) operator norm.
It is possible to extend the definitions of step function and regulated function and the associated integrals to functions defined on the whole real line. However, care must be taken with certain technical points:
The above definitions go through mutatis mutandis in the case of functions taking values in a Banach space X.