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Final corrections (#162)
* Wow. Such corrections. 🐶
* Other corrections for Chapter 30.
* Update errata.
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errata.md
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@ -8,6 +8,14 @@
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* [#157](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/157) - Adding paragraph indent
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### 12. Limits and Colimits
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* [#162](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/162) - Fix grammatical error
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### 14. Representable Functors
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* [#162](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/162) - Fix grammatical error
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### 18. Adjunctions
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* [#160](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/160) - Fix spelling of "counit"
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@ -20,6 +28,11 @@
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### 20. Monads - Programmer's Definition
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* [#160](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/160) - Fix grammatical error
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* [#162](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/162) - Fix grammatical error
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### 22. Monads Categorically
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* [#162](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/162) - Fix grammatical error
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### 23. Comonads
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@ -30,6 +43,7 @@
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* [#158](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/158) - fixed incorrect typesetting of `set`
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* [#159](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/159) - fixed incorrect typesetting of category terms
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* [#160](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/160) - Fix spelling of "counit" and "morphisms", fix subscript spacing
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* [#162](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/162) - Fix grammatical errors
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### 26. Ends and Coends
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@ -43,7 +57,13 @@
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### 28. Enriched Categories
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* [#160](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/160) - Fix subscript spacing
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* [#162](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/162) - Fix grammatical error
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### 29. Topoi
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* [#162](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/162) - Fix grammatical error
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### 30. Lawvere Theories
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* [#160](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/160) - Fix spelling of "coequalizer"
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* [#162](https://github.com/hmemcpy/milewski-ctfp-pdf/pull/162) - Fix grammatical errors and a typesetting error
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@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ identities) in $\cat{2}$.
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A generalization of this construction to categories other than
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$\cat{2}$ --- ones that, for instance, contain non-trivial morphisms
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--- will impose naturality conditions on the transformation between
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$\Delta_c$ and $D$. We call such transformation a \emph{cone},
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$\Delta_c$ and $D$. We call such a transformation a \emph{cone},
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because the image of $\Delta$ is the apex of a cone/pyramid whose sides are
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formed by the components of the natural transformation. The image of $D$
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forms the base of the cone.
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@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ $\cat{C}$ as sets and functions in $\Set$.
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The functor $\cat{C}(a, -)$ itself is sometimes called representable.
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More generally, any functor $F$ that is naturally isomorphic to
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the hom-functor, for some choice of $a$, is called
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\newterm{representable}. Such functor must necessarily be
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\newterm{representable}. Such a functor must necessarily be
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$\Set$-valued, since $\cat{C}(a, -)$ is.
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I said before that we often think of isomorphic sets as identical. More
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@ -299,7 +299,7 @@ preorder). The monoidal structure is given by addition, with zero
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serving as the unit object. In other words, the tensor product of two
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numbers is their sum.
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A metric space is a category enriched over such monoidal category. A
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A metric space is a category enriched over such a monoidal category. A
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hom-object $\cat{C}(a, b)$ from object $a$ to $b$ is a
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non-negative (possibly infinite) number that we will call the distance
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from $a$ to $b$. Let's see what we get for identity and
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@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ of Haskell's type system with dependent types, or the exploration on
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homotopy type theory in programming.
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So far I've been casually identifying types with \emph{sets} of values.
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This is not strictly correct, because such approach doesn't take into
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This is not strictly correct, because such an approach doesn't take into
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account the fact that, in programming, we \emph{compute} values, and the
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computation is a process that takes time and, in extreme cases, might
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not terminate. Divergent computations are part of every Turing-complete
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@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ $1 \times 1$ (or $1^2$) in $\cat{L}$. In this sense, the category
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$\cat{F}$ behaves like the logarithm of $\cat{L}$.
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Among morphisms in $\cat{L}$ we have those transferred by the functor
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$I_{\cat{L}}$ from $\cat{F}$. They play structural role in $\cat{L}$. In
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$I_{\cat{L}}$ from $\cat{F}$. They play a structural role in $\cat{L}$. In
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particular coproduct injections $i_k$ become product projections
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$p_k$. A useful intuition is to imagine the projection:
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\[p_k \Colon 1^n \to 1\]
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@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ The preservation of products by models means that the image of
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$M$ in $\Set$ is a sequence of sets generated by powers of
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the set $M\ 1$ --- the image of the object $1$ from
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$\cat{L}$. Let's call this set $a$. (This set is sometimes
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called a \emph{sort}, and such algebra is called \newterm{single-sorted}. There
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called a \emph{sort}, and such an algebra is called \newterm{single-sorted}. There
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exist generalizations of Lawvere theories to multi-sorted algebras.) In
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particular, binary operations from $\cat{L}$ are mapped to functions:
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\[a \times a \to a\]
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@ -252,7 +252,7 @@ The functors that define models form a category of models,
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$\cat{Mod}(\cat{L}, \Set)$, with natural transformations as morphisms.
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Consider a model for the trivial Lawvere category
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$\Fop$. Such model is completely determined by
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$\Fop$. Such a model is completely determined by
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its value at $1$, $M\ 1$. Since $M\ 1$ can be any
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set, there are as many of these models as there are sets in
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$\Set$. Moreover, every morphism in $\cat{Mod}(\Fop, \Set)$ (a
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@ -279,7 +279,7 @@ elegant construction.
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Every monoid must have a unit, so we have to have a special morphism
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$\eta$ in $\cat{L}_{\cat{Mon}}$ that goes from $0$ to
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$1$. Notice that there can be no corresponding morphism in
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$\cat{F}$. Such morphism would go in the opposite direction, from
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$\cat{F}$. Such a morphism would go in the opposite direction, from
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$1$ to $0$ which, in $\cat{FinSet}$, would be a function
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from the singleton set to the empty set. No such function exists.
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@ -334,7 +334,7 @@ $\cat{L}$.
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Another way of deriving $U$ is by exploiting the fact that
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$\Fop$ is the initial object in $\cat{Law}$. It
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means that, for any Lawvere theory $\cat{L}$, there is a unique
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functor $\Fop \to L$. This functor induces the
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functor $\Fop \to \cat{L}$. This functor induces the
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opposite functor on models (since models are functors \emph{from}
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theories to sets):
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\[\cat{Mod}(\cat{L}, \Set) \to \cat{Mod}(\Fop, \Set)\]
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@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ We have previously arrived at the
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\hyperref[kleisli-categories]{writer
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monad} by embellishing regular functions. The particular embellishment
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was done by pairing their return values with strings or, more generally,
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with elements of a monoid. We can now recognize that such embellishment
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with elements of a monoid. We can now recognize that such an embellishment
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is a functor:
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\src{code/haskell/snippet02.hs}
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@ -524,7 +524,7 @@ This is indeed the implementation of \code{join} for the
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It turns out that not only every adjunction gives rise to a monad, but
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the converse is also true: every monad can be factorized into a
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composition of two adjoint functors. Such factorization is not unique
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composition of two adjoint functors. Such a factorization is not unique
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though.
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We'll talk about the other endofunctor $L \circ R$ in the next
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a monad} (and a comonad). The question is: Can every monad (comonad) be
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derived from an adjunction? The answer is positive. There is a whole
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family of adjunctions that generate a given monad. I'll show you two
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such adjunction.
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such adjunctions.
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Let's review the definitions. A monad is an endofunctor $m$
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equipped with two natural transformations that satisfy some coherence
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conditions. The components of these transformations at $a$ are:
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@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ the pair $(T\ a, \mu_a)$. So in order to define the component of
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the counit $\varepsilon$ at $(a, f)$, we need the right morphism in
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the Eilenberg-Moore category, or a homomorphism of T-algebras:
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\[(T\ a, \mu_a) \to (a, f)\]
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Such homomorphism should map the carrier $T\ a$ to $a$.
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Such a homomorphism should map the carrier $T\ a$ to $a$.
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Let's just resurrect the forgotten evaluator $f$. This time we'll
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use it as a homomorphism of T-algebras. Indeed, the same commuting
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diagram that makes $f$ a T-algebra may be re-interpreted to show
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