I have recently encountered the "Brouwer fixed-point theorem". The theorem states (per Wikipedia) that any convex compact set has the fixed point property. This statement struck me as odd as the theorem requires convexity, which isn't a topological property (i.e preserved by homeomorphisms) while the fixed-point property is.
My question then: Is there a simple or well known topological property which is equivalent to "homeomorphic to a convex set"
In the case of $A \subseteq \mathbb{R}$ it's not hard to see that $A$ is homeomorphic to (and is) a convex subset of $\mathbb{R}$ if and only if it is connected. My intuition tells me that in the case of $\mathbb{R}^2$ this extends to simply connected sets, and in higher dimensions to sets where all homotopy groups are trivial, but I don't know if my intuition is right on this.
EDIT: thinking on the comments and answers so far it seems another necessary condition is that the set also be locally connected. However that is still not sufficient as any 'Y shaped' subset of $\mathbb{R}^2$ still isn't homeomorphic to a convex set. Would being a simply connected manifold, possibly with boundary, be sufficient in $\mathbb{R}^2$?
Please note when answering that I'm mostly familiar with point-set topology and only know very little about algebraic topology.