A CW-complex is a homotopy-theoretic generalization of the notion of a Simplicial Complex. A CW-complex is any Space which can be built by starting off with a discrete collection of points called , then attaching 1-D Disks to along their boundaries , writing for the object obtained by attaching the s to , then attaching 2-D Disks to along their boundaries , writing for the new Space, and so on, giving spaces for every . A CW-complex is any Space that has this sort of decomposition into Subspaces built up in such a hierarchical fashion (so the s must exhaust all of ). In particular, may be built from by attaching infinitely many -Disks, and the attaching Maps may be any continuous Maps.
The main importance of CW-complexes is that, for the sake of Homotopy, Homology, and Cohomology groups, every Space is a CW-complex. This is called the CW-Approximation Theorem. Another is Whitehead's Theorem, which says that Maps between CW-complexes that induce Isomorphisms on all Homotopy Groups are actually Homotopy equivalences.
See also Cohomology, CW-Approximation Theorem, Homology Group, Homotopy Group, Simplicial Complex, Space, Subspace, Whitehead's Theorem