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
![{\displaystyle e=\int _{c}^{}S(c,c){\text{ or just }}\int _{\mathbf {C} }^{}S.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/f962c129772576d4418761caade4038e0fa9b22e)
Characterization as limit: If X is complete and C is small, the end can be described as the equalizer in the diagram
![{\displaystyle \int _{c}S(c,c)\to \prod _{c\in C}S(c,c)\rightrightarrows \prod _{c\to c'}S(c,c'),}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/2d5afad94d87bbf05cdf30dbdac5920f5f1a921e)
where the first morphism being equalized is induced by
and the second is induced by
.