Convergent Sequence in Metric Space has Unique Limit/Proof 1

Theorem
Let $\left({X, d}\right)$ be a metric space.

Let $\left \langle {x_n} \right \rangle$ be a sequence in $\left({X, d}\right)$.

Then $\left \langle {x_n} \right \rangle$ can have at most one limit.

Proof
Suppose $\displaystyle \lim_{n \to \infty} x_n = l$ and $\displaystyle \lim_{n \to \infty} x_n = m$.

Let $\epsilon > 0$.

Then, provided $n$ is sufficiently large:

So $0 \le \dfrac {d \left({l, m}\right)} 2 < \epsilon$.

This holds for any value of $\epsilon > 0$.

Thus from Real Plus Epsilon it follows that $\dfrac {d \left({l, m}\right)} 2 = 0$, that is, that $l = m$.