Could I please have an example of closed sets with empty interior? Any topological space. Everything goes.
Remark: This is not homework. I'm in the middle of proving the space of $n$-degree polynomials in $(C[0,1], \lVert \cdot \rVert_\infty)$ is meager. Empty interior of this set (if I'm at all correct...) is the punchline and I just want to understand a bit more the nature of closed sets with empty interior.

Consider every finite set in the euclideian topology in $\mathbb{R}$
Also $\mathbb{Z}$ is closed because $\mathbb{R}$ \ $\mathbb{Z}=\bigcup_{n \in \mathbb{Z}}(n,n+1)$
Or the set $A= \{1/n | n \in \mathbb{N}\} \cup \{0\}$
Or the Cantor set which does not contain an interval but it is closed as an intersection of closed sets.
Or Every line and curve in the plane.
All these sets of course with the euclideian topology.
Also the finite sets in $\mathbb{N}$ with respect to the cofinite topology.