In the following is Theorem 13.6 from Bruckner's Real Analysis which I don't understand some claims on it :
Question in Blue: $\mu (|f_j(x)| > \|f_j\|_∞)=0$ and $\mu (|f_k(x)| > \|f_k\|_∞)=0$. But how that implies $\mu (|f_j(x) - f_k(x)| > \|f_k\|_∞)=0$?
Question in Green: It is clear that $f$ is bounded and is the pointwise convergence of $f_n$ to $f$. How that convergence is uniform?
Theorem 13.6 Let $(X, \mathcal{M}, \mu)$ be a measure space. Then the space $L_{\infty}(\mu)$ is a Banach space furnished with the norm $\|f\|_{\infty} .$
Proof. It is easy to see that a linear combination of essentially bounded functions remains essentially bounded, and so the space is linear. It is almost immediate that $\|f\|_{\infty}$ is a norm on this space. The triangle inequality, that $$ \|f+g\|_{\infty} \leq\|f\|_{\infty}+\|g\|_{\infty} $$ (which can also be considered as the extension of Minkowski's inequality to the case $p=\infty$ ), follows from the set inclusion $$ \begin{array}{c} \left\{x:|f(x)+g(x)|>\|f\|_{\infty}+\|g\|_{\infty}\right\} \\ \subset\left\{x:|f(x)|>\|f\|_{\infty}\right\} \cup\left\{x:|g(x)|>\|g\|_{\infty}\right\}. \end{array} $$ Exercise 13:3.2 shows that each of the sets on the right side of the inclusion has $\mu$ -measure zero and so, too, must the set on the left. This gives the triangle inequality.
$\quad$The completeness part of the proof is rather simpler than the completeness proof for the $L_{p}$ spaces with $1 \leq p<\infty$. Let $\left\{f_{n}\right\}$ be Cauchy in $L_{\infty}(\mu)$. Define $A_{i}$ to be the set of points $x$ in $X$ for which $\left|f_{i}(x)\right|>\left\|f_{i}\right\|_{\infty}$, and define $\color{blue}{B_{j, k}}$ to be the set of points $x$ in $X$ for which $\left|f_{j}(x)-f_{k}(x)\right|>\left\|f_{k}\right\|_{\infty}$. All these sets $\color{blue}{\text{have measure zero by definition}}$. Let $E$ be the totality of all these points, that is, the union of these sets taken over all integers $i, j, k$. Then $E$ has measure zero, and the sequence $\left\{f_{n}(x)\right\}$ converges for every $x \in X \backslash E$, and indeed $\color{green}{\text{it converges uniformly to some bounded function $f$}}$ defined on $X \backslash E .$ We can extend $f$ to all of $X$ in any arbitrary fashion [or simply set $f(x)=0$ for $x \in E]$, and it is easy to see that $f \in L_{\infty}(\mu)$ and that $\left\|f-f_{n}\right\|_{\infty} \rightarrow 0$ as $n \rightarrow \infty$.$\blacksquare$
Question 3 : Exercise 13:3.1 says that a sequence $f_n$ converges to a function $f$ in the space $L_∞(X, M,μ)$ if and only if there is a set $E ∈M$ with $μ(E)=0$ so that $f_n → f$ uniformly on $X \setminus E$. One direction is the "Green" question, for the other direction, isn't it a convention/definition rather than a theorem?