So checking every ideal be principal is the same as checking just the prime ideals apparently. Also apparently you can't ease this to just checking the maximal ideals. Sure.
But then the book says that, because of the first proposition I made, somehow a regular local domain of dimension $1$ is a principal ideal domain. Breaking that down, it's because it has a unique maximal ideal that can be written down with $1$ generator. But didn't we *just* say it was not sufficient to only check the maximal ideals? What is going on?
But then the book says that, because of the first proposition I made, somehow a regular local domain of dimension $1$ is a principal ideal domain. Breaking that down, it's because it has a unique maximal ideal that can be written down with $1$ generator. But didn't we *just* say it was not sufficient to only check the maximal ideals? What is going on?