Mathematical concept
This article is about the type of transformation. For the category of morphisms denoted as
End, see
Endomorphism.
In category theory, an end of a functor
is a universal dinatural transformation from an object e of X to S.
More explicitly, this is a pair
, where e is an object of X and
is an extranatural transformation such that for every extranatural transformation
there exists a unique morphism
of X with
for every object a of C.
By abuse of language the object e is often called the end of the functor S (forgetting
) and is written

Characterization as limit: If X is complete and C is small, the end can be described as the equalizer in the diagram

where the first morphism being equalized is induced by
and the second is induced by
.
Coend
The definition of the coend of a functor
is the dual of the definition of an end.
Thus, a coend of S consists of a pair
, where d is an object of X and
is an extranatural transformation, such that for every extranatural transformation
there exists a unique morphism
of X with
for every object a of C.
The coend d of the functor S is written

Characterization as colimit: Dually, if X is cocomplete and C is small, then the coend can be described as the coequalizer in the diagram

Examples
- Natural transformations:
Suppose we have functors
then
.
In this case, the category of sets is complete, so we need only form the equalizer and in this case

the natural transformations from
to
. Intuitively, a natural transformation from
to
is a morphism from
to
for every
in the category with compatibility conditions. Looking at the equalizer diagram defining the end makes the equivalence clear.
- Geometric realizations:
Let
be a simplicial set. That is,
is a functor
. The discrete topology gives a functor
, where
is the category of topological spaces. Moreover, there is a map
sending the object
of
to the standard
-simplex inside
. Finally there is a functor
that takes the product of two topological spaces.
Define
to be the composition of this product functor with
. The coend of
is the geometric realization of
.
Notes
References
External links