<pre>
-for all `s1`, `s2`, `s3` in `S`:
-(i) `s1*s2` etc are also in `S`
-(ii) `(s1*s2)*s3` = `s1*(s2*s3)`
-(iii) `z*s1` = `s1` = `s1*z`
+ for all s1, s2, s3 in S:
+ (i) s1*s2 etc are also in S
+ (ii) (s1*s2)*s3 = s1*(s2*s3)
+ (iii) z*s1 = s1 = s1*z
</pre>
Some examples of monoids are:
To have a category, the elements and morphisms have to satisfy some constraints:
-<blockquote><pre>
-(i) the class of morphisms has to be closed under composition: where `f:C1->C2` and `g:C2->C3`, `g o f` is also a morphism of the category, which maps `C1->C3`.<BR>
-(ii) composition of morphisms has to be associative<BR>
-(iii) every element `E` of the category has to have an identity morphism 1<sub>E</sub>, which is such that for every morphism `f:C1->C2`: 1<sub>C2</sub> o f = f = f o 1<sub>C1</sub>
-</pre></blockquote>
+<pre>
+ (i) the class of morphisms has to be closed under composition: where f:C1->C2 and g:C2->C3, g o f is also a morphism of the category, which maps C1->C3.
+ (ii) composition of morphisms has to be associative
+ (iii) every element E of the category has to have an identity morphism 1<sub>E</sub>, which is such that for every morphism f:C1->C2: 1<sub>C2</sub> o f = f = f o 1<sub>C1</sub>
+</pre>
These parallel the constraints for monoids. Note that there can be multiple distinct morphisms between an element `E` and itself; they need not all be identity morphisms. Indeed from (iii) it follows that each element can have only a single identity morphism.
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A **functor** is a "homomorphism", that is, a structure-preserving mapping, between categories. In particular, a functor `F` from category **C** to category **D** must:
+<pre>
(i) associate with every element C1 of **C** an element F(C1) of **D**
(ii) associate with every morphism f:C1->C2 of **C** a morphism F(f):F(C1)->F(C2) of **D**
(iii) "preserve identity", that is, for every element C1 of **C**: F of C1's identity morphism in **C** must be the identity morphism of F(C1) in **D**: F(1<sub>C1</sub>) = 1<sub>F(C1)</sub>.
(iv) "distribute over composition", that is for any morphisms f and g in **C**: F(g o f) = F(g) o F(f)
+</pre>
A functor that maps a category to itself is called an **endofunctor**. The (endo)functor that maps every element and morphism of **C** to itself is denoted `1C`.