Filtered category
In category theory, filtered categories generalize the notion of directed set understood as a category (hence called a directed category; while some use directed category as a synonym for a filtered category). There is a dual notion of cofiltered category which will be recalled below.
Filtered categories
A category is filtered when
- it is not empty,
- for every two objects
and
in
there exists an object
and two arrows
and
in
,
- for every two parallel arrows
in
, there exists an object
and an arrow
such that
.
A diagram is said to be of cardinality if the morphism set of its domain is of cardinality
. A category
is filtered if and only if there is a cocone over any finite diagram
; more generally, for a regular cardinal
, a category
is said to be
-filtered if for every diagram
in
of cardinality smaller than
there is a cocone over
.
A filtered colimit is a colimit of a functor where
is a filtered category. This readily generalizes to
-filtered limits. An ind-object in a category
is a presheaf of sets
which is a small filtered colimit of representable presheaves. Ind-objects in a category
form a full subcategory
in the category of functors
. The category
of pro-objects in
is the opposite of the category of ind-objects in the opposite category
.
Cofiltered categories
A category is cofiltered if the opposite category
is filtered. In detail, a category is cofiltered when
- it is not empty
- for every two objects
and
in
there exists an object
and two arrows
and
in
,
- for every two parallel arrows
in
, there exists an object
and an arrow
such that
.
A cofiltered limit is a limit of a functor where
is a cofiltered category.
References
- Artin, M., Grothendieck, A. and Verdier, J. L. Séminaire de Géométrie Algébrique du Bois Marie (SGA 4). Lecture Notes in Mathematics 269, Springer Verlag, 1972. Exposé I, 2.7.
- Mac Lane, Saunders (1998), Categories for the Working Mathematician (2nd ed.), Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-98403-2, section IX.1.