Mapping from Cartesian Product under Chebyshev Distance to Real Number Line is Continuous

Theorem
Let $M = \struct {A, d'}$ be a metric space.

Let $\ds \AA = A \times A$ be the cartesian product of $A$ with itself.

Let $d_\infty: \AA \times \AA \to \R$ be the Chebyshev distance on $\AA$:
 * $\ds \map {d_\infty} {x, y} = \max \set {\map {d'} {x_1, y_1}, \map {d'} {x_2, y_2} }$

where $x = \tuple {x_1, x_2}, y = \tuple {y_1, y_2} \in \AA$.

Then the mapping:
 * $d': \struct {A \times A, d_\infty} \to \struct {\R, d}$

where $d$ is the usual metric, is continuous.

Proof
From definition of continuous mapping:

We just need to show that:
 * $\forall \tuple {a, b} \in A \times A: \forall \epsilon \in \R_{>0}: \exists \delta \in \R_{>0}: \forall \tuple {x, y} \in A \times A: \map {d_\infty} {\tuple {x, y}, \tuple {a, b}} < \delta \implies \map d {\map {d'} {x, y}, \map {d'} {a, b}} < \epsilon$

Let $\tuple {a, b} \in A \times A$ and $\epsilon \in \R_{>0}$.

Let $\tuple {x, y} \in A \times A$.

Suppose $\map {d_\infty} {\tuple {x, y}, \tuple {a, b}} < \dfrac \epsilon 2$.

Then:

Therefore $d'$ is continuous.