Gaussian Integers form Euclidean Domain/Proof 2

Proof
We have by definition that $\Z \left[{i}\right] \subseteq \C$.

Let $a, b \in \Z \left[{i}\right]$.

We have from Modulus of Product that:


 * $\left \vert{a}\right \vert \cdot \left \vert{b}\right \vert = \left \vert{a b}\right \vert$

From Modulus is Norm we have that:


 * $\forall a \in \C: \left \vert{a}\right \vert \ge 0$


 * $\left \vert{a}\right \vert = 0 \iff a = 0$

Suppose $a = x + i y \in \Z \left[{i}\right]$ and $a \ne 0$.

Then either $x \ne 0$ or $y \ne 0$, so either $x^2 \ge 1$ or $y^2 \ge 1$.

So $\left \vert{a}\right \vert^2 \ge 1$.

If also $b \in \Z \left[{i}\right], b \ne 0$, then:


 * $\nu \left({a b}\right) = \left \vert{a b}\right \vert^2 \ge \left \vert{a}\right \vert^2 = \nu \left({a}\right)$

Now, consider $x, y \in \Z \left[{i}\right]$ with $y \ne 0$.

We want to find $q, r \in \Z \left[{i}\right]$ such that $x = q y + r$ and $\nu \left({r}\right) < \nu \left({y}\right)$.

Note that this means we want $r = y \left({\dfrac x y - q}\right)$ where $\dfrac x y$ is complex but not necessarily Gaussian.

Consider the complex number $p = \dfrac x y = p_r + i p_i$.

We extend $\nu$ to the complex numbers and define $\nu: \C \to \C$ as:
 * $\forall z \in \C: \nu \left({z}\right) = \left \vert{z}\right \vert^2$

Let $q = q_r + i q_i$ be the Gaussian integer such that:


 * $\nu\left({p - q}\right) = \left\vert p - q \right\vert^2 = \left({p_r - q_r}\right)^2 + \left({p_i - q_i}\right)^2$

is minimal.

That is, $q_r$ is the nearest integer to $p_r$ and $q_i$ is the nearest integer to $p_i$.

A given real number can be at a distance at most $1/2$ from an integer, so it follows that:
 * $(1): \quad \nu \left({p - q}\right) \le \left({\dfrac 1 2}\right)^2 + \left({\dfrac 1 2}\right)^2 = \dfrac 1 2$

Now by Modulus is Norm, for any two complex numbers $z_1, z_2$ we have:
 * $\nu\left({z_1 z_2}\right) = \nu \left({z_1}\right) \nu \left({z_2}\right)$

Thus we obtain:

On the other hand:

So letting $r = x - y q$ we have $\nu \left({r}\right) < \nu \left({y}\right)$.

Moreover we trivially have $x = q y + r$.

Thus $\Z \left[{i}\right]$ is a Euclidean domain.