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In mathematics, the triangle inequality is a statement which states roughly that the distance from A to B to C is never shorter than going directly from A to C. The triangle inequality is a theorem in spaces such as the real numbers, Euclidean space, Lp spaces (p ≥ 1) and more generally in all inner product spaces; it is an axiom in the definition of abstract concepts such as normed vector spaces and metric spaces.
In a normed vector space V, the triangle inequality reads
In a metric space M with metric d, the triangle inequality is
The following consequences of the triangle inequalities are often useful; they give lower bounds instead of upper bounds:
See also Cauchy-Schwarz inequality.