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I'd like to show that the Euler characteristic ($V - E + F$) of a compact oriented surface without boundary, $S$$g$, is of the form $2 - 2g$ where $S$$g$ is a sphere with $g$ handles.

A sphere with handles is obtained by cutting $2g$ disks out of the sphere and gluing in $g$ cylinders along the boundary circles. Hence, $S$$0$ is the sphere and the torus is $S$$1$.

I'm pretty new to topology. But I think induction would make for an easy, understandable proof where the base case is the sphere.

Any help or solutions are appreciated!

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    There are many ways of doing this. Personally, I would work with the enlarged family of surfaces with boundary. You can compute the Euler characteristic of the disk and of the cylinder by hand. You can also find what happens to the Euler characteristic when you attach two surfaces along some of their boundary components. Once you have this, you can compute the Euler characteristic of the sphere with 2g disks removed and then use your construction.2011-12-10

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You could represent your surface with $g$ handles as a polygon with $4g$ edges suitably identified in pairs, and then compute $V$, $E$, and $F$ for that polygon, and then $V-E+F$.