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In mathematics, a function space is a set of functions from a set X to a set Y, of a given kind. It is called a space because in most applications, it is a topological space or/and a vector space. Function spaces appear in various areas of mathematics:
Another related idea from physics is the configuration space. This has no single meaning, but for N particles moving in some manifold M it might be the space of positions MN - or the subspace where no two positions were equal. To take account of both position and momenta one moves to the cotangent bundle. The configurations of a curve would be a function space of some kind. In quantum mechanics one formulation emphasises 'histories' as configurations. In short, a configuration space is typically "half" of (see lagrangian distribution) a phase space that is constructed from a function space.
Configuration spaces are related to braid theory, also, since the condition on a string of not passing through itself is formulated by cutting diagonals out of function spaces.