Homeomorphism between Topological Spaces may not be Unique

Theorem
Let $T_1$ and $T_2$ be topological spaces.

Let $f$ be a homeomorphism from $T_1$ to $T_2$.

Then $f$ may not necessarily be unique.

Proof
Let $\R$ be the real number line with the Euclidean topology.

Let $I_1 := \openint a b$ and $I_2 := \openint c d$ be non-empty open real intervals.

From Open Real Intervals are Homeomorphic, $I_1$ and $I_2$ are homeomorphic.

The example given of a homeomorphism was the real function $f: I_1 \to I_2$ defined as:
 * $\forall x \in I_1: \map f x = c + \dfrac {\paren {d - c} \paren {x - a} } {b - a}$

However, note that the following real functions for all $n \in \Z_{>0}$:

are all homeomorphisms from $I_1$ to $I_2$.