Category theory

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Category theory

Definition

A category consists of the following data:

  1. A class of "objects," denoted Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle ob(\mathscr{C})}
  2. For objects Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle A,B,C\in ob(\mathscr{C})} , a set Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle \text{Mor}_{\mathscr{C}}(A,B)} such that Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle \text{Mor}_{\mathscr{C}}(A,B)\cap \text{Mor}_{\mathscr{C}}(A',B')} is empty if and

together with a "law of composition": Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle \circ :\text{Mor}_{\mathscr{C}}(B,C)\times\text{Mor}_{\mathscr{C}}(A,B)\to \text{Mor}_{\mathscr{C}}(A,C)} (which we denote by ) which is

    1. Associative: whenever the compositions are defined
    2. Having identity: for every object Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle A\in ob(\mathscr{C})} there is an element such that for all Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle f\in\text{Mor}_{\mathscr{C}}(A,B)} , and .

Examples

  1. The category of sets:
  2. The category of topological spaces:
  3. The category of functors: if Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle \mathscr{C}} and Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle \mathscr{D}} are two

categories, then there is a category consisting of all contravarient functors from Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle \mathscr{C}} to Failed to parse (unknown function "\mathscr"): {\displaystyle \mathscr{D}} , where morphisms are natural transformations.

  1. The category of schemes is one of the principal objects of study