Brainlet here. Can someone explain the definition of epimorphism to me and give me a simple example?
The definition I am using is the categorical one here: en.wikipedia.org
I don't understand the definition.
Is it saying you have (in set theory terms) a set X, Y, Z and functions f, g1 and g2 s.t.,
g1 * f = g2 & f => g1 = g2
meaning....
f: X -> Y (X is the domain, Y is the codomain)
g1, g1: Y -> Z (Y is the domain, Z is the codomain) ?
My questions are:
How the fuck does this match the definition of surjectivity in set theory?
What if there are elements in Z that don't have any arrows from Y? I don't see anything in the definition that says there HAS to be an arrow for every element in Z to it from elements in Y.
Also,
what the fuck is this even saying with the arrows?
would this be an example satisfying the definition?
f(x)=y
g1(y) = 2
g2(y)=2
?
I don't "get" the definition. Please provide an example that makes it more clear.
I do not understand the example provided here: Set, sets and functions. To prove that every epimorphism f: X → Y in Set is surjective, we compose it with both the characteristic function g1: Y → {0,1} of the image f(X) and the map g2: Y → {0,1} that is constant 1.
so if someone could spell it out for a retard what that means/show me a clean example that shows me the definition in action it would be much apperciated
Thanks from a brianlet!