In the proof for Euler's formula, we expand $e^{ix}$ as a Taylor series, rearrange the terms, factor out $i$, and thus obtain the Taylor series for $\sin (x)$ and $\cos(x)$. However, this rearrangement can only be done if the Taylor series for $e^{ix}$ is absolutely convergent, by the Riemann series theorem.
I know how to prove that a series of real terms is absolutely convergent. However, how do you do the same for a series of complex terms, like the one obtained in the Taylor series expansion of $e^{ix}$?
The complex numbers work the same way $\mathbb{R}^2$ does as a metric spaces but the generalization is the same for $\mathbb{R}^n$, we pass from the point to its length by using the distance function induced by the Euclidean norm. This often requires repeated use of the triangle inequality but the flow of the argument remains essentially the same for the multivariable Taylor series.