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  2. Initial and terminal objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Initial_and_terminal_objects

    Initial and terminal objects may also be characterized in terms of universal properties and adjoint functors. Let 1 be the discrete category with a single object (denoted by •), and let U : C → 1 be the unique (constant) functor to 1. Then An initial object I in C is a universal morphism from • to U.

  3. Universal property - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_property

    Universal constructions are functorial in nature: if one can carry out the construction for every object in a category C then one obtains a functor on C. Furthermore, this functor is a right or left adjoint to the functor U used in the definition of the universal property. [2] Universal properties occur everywhere in mathematics.

  4. Preadditive category - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preadditive_category

    Note that because a nullary biproduct will be both terminal (a nullary product) and initial (a nullary coproduct), it will in fact be a zero object. Indeed, the term "zero object" originated in the study of preadditive categories like Ab, where the zero object is the zero group.

  5. Monoid (category theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monoid_(category_theory)

    A monoid object in [C, C] is a monad on C. For any category with a terminal object and finite products, every object becomes a comonoid object via the diagonal morphism Δ X : X → X × X. Dually in a category with an initial object and finite coproducts every object becomes a monoid object via id X ⊔ id X : X ⊔ X → X.

  6. Glossary of category theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_category_theory

    2. An object A in an ∞-category C is terminal if ⁡ (,) is contractible for every object B in C. thick subcategory A full subcategory of an abelian category is thick if it is closed under extensions. thin A thin category is a category where there is at most one morphism between any pair of objects. tiny

  7. Monoidal category - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monoidal_category

    For every category C, the free strict monoidal category Σ(C) can be constructed as follows: its objects are lists (finite sequences) A 1, ..., A n of objects of C; there are arrows between two objects A 1, ..., A m and B 1, ..., B n only if m = n, and then the arrows are lists (finite sequences) of arrows f 1: A 1 → B 1, ..., f n: A n → B ...

  8. Category of sets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category_of_sets

    The empty set serves as the initial object in Set with empty functions as morphisms. Every singleton is a terminal object, with the functions mapping all elements of the source sets to the single target element as morphisms. There are thus no zero objects in Set. The category Set is complete and co-complete.

  9. Kleisli category - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleisli_category

    Let T, η, μ be a monad over a category C.The Kleisli category of C is the category C T whose objects and morphisms are given by = (), (,) = (,).That is, every morphism f: X → T Y in C (with codomain TY) can also be regarded as a morphism in C T (but with codomain Y).