Categorical bridge

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In category theory, a discipline in mathematics, a bridge between categories \mathbb A and \mathbb B is a category \mathbb H such that \mathbb A and \mathbb B are disjoint full subcategories of \mathbb H and \mathrm{Ob}\mathbb H=\mathrm{Ob}\mathbb A\cup \mathrm{Ob}\mathbb B. Morphisms of \mathbb A and \mathbb B are called homomorphisms and the rest (passing between \mathbb A and \mathbb B) are called heteromorphisms.

In notation: \mathbb H:\mathbb A\leftrightharpoons \mathbb B.

As an example, the empty bridge between two categories is just their disjoint union.

A directed bridge from \mathbb A to \mathbb B is a bridge without arrows of the form B\to A (where B\in\mathrm{Ob}\mathbb B and A\in\mathrm{Ob}\mathbb A). We can easily see that directed bridges and profunctors (i.e. functors F:\mathbb A^{op}\times\mathbb B\to\mathrm{Set}) are eventually the same [by identifying F(A,B) with the set of heteromorphisms A\to B].

[edit] Bridge morphism

A morphism between bridges \mathbb H, \mathbb K:\mathbb A\leftrightharpoons \mathbb B is just a functor \varphi:\mathbb H\to\mathbb K which is identical on both \mathbb A and \mathbb B, i.e. \varphi\mid_{\mathbb A}= \mathrm{id}_{\mathbb A} and \varphi\mid_{\mathbb B}= \mathrm{id}_{\mathbb B}.

[edit] Profunctors (directed bridges)

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