What's the difference between uniformly equicontinuous and uniformly continuous?
The family of function $(f_n)$ defined on $[a,b]$ is said :
Uniformly equicontinuous : $\forall \epsilon>0,\exists\delta>0,\forall n \in \mathbb{N}, \forall s,t \in [a,b], \ |s-t|< \delta \ \Rightarrow \ |f_n(t)-f_n(s)|<\epsilon$
Uniformly continuous : $\forall \epsilon>0,\forall n \in \mathbb{N},\exists\delta>0, \forall s,t \in [a,b], \ |s-t|< \delta \ \Rightarrow \ |f_n(t)-f_n(s)|<\epsilon$
Look at the place of $\forall n \in \mathbb{N}$. In the first case, you have the same $\delta$ for the whole family of functions. While in the second case, the $\delta$ may depend on the function you are considering. One can remark that uniform equicontinuity implies uniform continuity. So uniform equicontinuity is a more strong condition.
If $E,E'$ are metric spaces then a function $f:E\to E'$ is uniformly continuous if for each $\varepsilon>0$ there exists $\delta>0$ such that $$\sup\{d'(f(x),f(y)) : d(x,y)<\delta\}<\varepsilon.$$ A family of functions $(f_\alpha)_{\alpha\in I}$ from $E$ to $E'$ is uniformly equicontinuous if for each $\varepsilon>0$ there exists $\delta>0$ such that $$\sup_{\alpha\in I}\sup\{d'(f_\alpha(x),f_\alpha(y)) : d(x,y)<\delta\}<\varepsilon.$$