Complete category: Difference between revisions

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m Added citation for bicompletion of set. The citation is sufficient for completion (and includes proof), but only states (without proof) the co-completion half.
 
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*The following categories are bicomplete:
*The following categories are bicomplete:
**'''Set''', the [[category of sets]]
**'''Set''', the [[category of sets]]<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mac Lane |first=Saunders |title=Categories for the working mathematician |date=2000 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-0-387-98403-2 |edition=2. ed., [Nachdr.] |series=Graduate texts in mathematics |location=New York |pages=110-112}}</ref>
**'''Top''', the [[category of topological spaces]]
**'''Top''', the [[category of topological spaces]]
**'''Grp''', the [[category of groups]]
**'''Grp''', the [[category of groups]]
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*{{cite book | last = Adámek | first = Jiří |author2=Horst Herrlich |author3=George E. Strecker  | year = 1990 | url = http://katmat.math.uni-bremen.de/acc/acc.pdf | title = Abstract and Concrete Categories | publisher = John Wiley & Sons | isbn = 0-471-60922-6}}
*{{cite book | last = Adámek | first = Jiří |author2=Horst Herrlich |author3=George E. Strecker  | year = 1990 | url = http://katmat.math.uni-bremen.de/acc/acc.pdf | title = Abstract and Concrete Categories | publisher = John Wiley & Sons | isbn = 0-471-60922-6}}
*{{cite book | first = Saunders | last = Mac Lane | authorlink = Saunders Mac Lane | year = 1998 | title = Categories for the Working Mathematician | title-link = Categories for the Working Mathematician | series = Graduate Texts in Mathematics '''5''' | edition = (2nd ed.) | publisher = Springer | isbn = 0-387-98403-8}}
*{{cite book | first = Saunders | last = Mac Lane | authorlink = Saunders Mac Lane | year = 1998 | title = Categories for the Working Mathematician | title-link = Categories for the Working Mathematician | series = Graduate Texts in Mathematics '''5''' | edition = 2nd | publisher = Springer | isbn = 0-387-98403-8}}


[[Category:Limits (category theory)]]
[[Category:Limits (category theory)]]

Latest revision as of 18:27, 28 December 2025

Template:Short descriptionIn mathematics, a complete category is a category in which all small limits exist. That is, a category C is complete if every diagram F : JC (where J is small) has a limit in C. Dually, a cocomplete category is one in which all small colimits exist. A bicomplete category is a category which is both complete and cocomplete.

The existence of all limits (even when J is a proper class) is too strong to be practically relevant. Any category with this property is necessarily a thin category: for any two objects there can be at most one morphism from one object to the other.

A weaker form of completeness is that of finite completeness. A category is finitely complete if all finite limits exists (i.e. limits of diagrams indexed by a finite category J). Dually, a category is finitely cocomplete if all finite colimits exist.

Theorems

It follows from the existence theorem for limits that a category is complete if and only if it has equalizers (of all pairs of morphisms) and all (small) products. Since equalizers may be constructed from pullbacks and binary products (consider the pullback of (f, g) along the diagonal Δ), a category is complete if and only if it has pullbacks and products.

Dually, a category is cocomplete if and only if it has coequalizers and all (small) coproducts, or, equivalently, pushouts and coproducts.

Finite completeness can be characterized in several ways. For a category C, the following are all equivalent:

  • C is finitely complete,
  • C has equalizers and all finite products,
  • C has equalizers, binary products, and a terminal object,
  • C has pullbacks and a terminal object.

The dual statements are also equivalent.

A small category C is complete if and only if it is cocomplete.[1] A small complete category is necessarily thin.

A posetal category vacuously has all equalizers and coequalizers, whence it is (finitely) complete if and only if it has all (finite) products, and dually for cocompleteness. Without the finiteness restriction a posetal category with all products is automatically cocomplete, and dually, by a theorem about complete lattices.

Examples and nonexamples

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References

  1. Abstract and Concrete Categories, Jiří Adámek, Horst Herrlich, and George E. Strecker, theorem 12.7, page 213
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Further reading

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