Category (mathematics)

In mathematics, a category is a fundamental and abstract way to describe mathematical entities and their relationships. A category is composed of a collection of abstract "objects" of any kind, linked together by a collection of abstract "arrows" of any kind that have a few basic properties (the ability to compose the arrows associatively and the existence of an identity arrow for each object). Two categories are the same if they have the same collection of objects, the same collection of arrows, and the same associative method of composing any two arrows. Two categories may also be considered "equivalent" for purposes of category theory, even if they are not precisely the same. Many well-known categories are conventionally identified by a short capitalized word or abbreviation in bold or italics such as Set (category of sets) or Ring (category of rings).

The notion of a category is the central idea within a branch of mathematics called category theory, which seeks to generalize all of mathematics in terms of such abstract objects and arrows, independent of the particular details of what the objects and arrows represent. Virtually every branch of modern mathematics can be described in terms of categories, and doing so often reveals deep insights and similarities between seemingly-different areas of mathematics. For more extensive motivational background and historical notes, see category theory and the list of category theory topics.

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Definition

A category C consists of

such that the following axioms hold:

From these axioms, one can prove that there is exactly one identity morphism for every object. Some authors use a slight variation of the definition in which each object is identified with the corresponding identity morphism.

A small category is a category in which both ob(C) and hom(C) are actually sets and not proper classes. A category that is not small is said to be large. A locally small category is a category such that for all objects a and b, the hom-class hom(a, b) is a set, called a homset. Many important categories in mathematics (such as the category of sets), although not small, are at least locally small.

The morphisms of a category are sometimes called arrows due to the influence of commutative diagrams.

Examples

Each category is presented in terms of its objects, its morphisms, and its composition of morphisms.

Types of morphisms

A morphism f : ab is called

Every retraction is an epimorphism. Every section is a monomorphism. The following three statements are equivalent:

Relations among morphisms (such as fg = h) can most conveniently be represented with commutative diagrams, where the objects are represented as points and the morphisms as arrows.

Types of categories

See also

References

External links