module Cat.Functor.FullSubcategory {o h} {C : Precategory o h} where

Full subcategories🔗

A full subcategory D\mathcal{D} of some larger category C\mathcal{C} is the category generated by some predicate PP on the objects of of C\mathcal{C}: You keep only those objects for which PP holds, and all the morphisms between them. An example is the category of abelian groups, as a full subcategory of groups: being abelian is a proposition (there’s “at most one way for a group to be abelian”).

We can interpret full subcategories, by analogy, as being the “induced subgraphs” of the categorical world: Keep only some of the vertices (objects), but all of the arrows (arrows) between them.

record Restrict-ob (P : C.Ob  Type ℓ) : Type (o ⊔ ℓ) where
  no-eta-equality
  constructor restrict
  field
    object : C.Ob
    witness : P object

open Restrict-ob public

Restrict : (P : C.Ob  Type ℓ)
          Precategory (o ⊔ ℓ) h
Restrict P .Ob = Restrict-ob P
Restrict P .Hom A B = C.Hom (A .object) (B .object)
Restrict P .Hom-set _ _ = C.Hom-set _ _
Restrict P .id    = C.id
Restrict P .__   = C.__
Restrict P .idr   = C.idr
Restrict P .idl   = C.idl
Restrict P .assoc = C.assoc

A very important property of full subcategories (Restrictions) is that any full subcategory of a univalent category is univalent. The argument is roughly as follows: Since C\mathcal{C} is univalent, an isomorphism ABA \cong B gives us a path ABA \equiv B, so in particular if we know ABA \cong B and P(A)P(A), then we have P(B)P(B). But, since the morphisms in the full subcategory coincide with those of C\mathcal{C}, any iso in the subcategory is an iso in C\mathcal{C}, thus a path!

module _ (P : C.Ob  Type ℓ) where
  import Cat.Reasoning (Restrict P) as R

We begin by translating between isomorphisms in the subcategory (called R\mathcal{R} here) and in C\mathcal{C}, which can be done by destructuring and reassembling:

  sub-iso→super-iso :  {A B : Restrict-ob P}  (A R.≅ B)  (A .object C.≅ B .object)
  sub-iso→super-iso x = C.make-iso x.to x.from x.invl x.invr
    where module x = R.__ x

  super-iso→sub-iso :  {A B : Restrict-ob P}  (A .object C.≅ B .object)  (A R.≅ B)
  super-iso→sub-iso y = R.make-iso y.to y.from y.invl y.invr
    where module y = C.__ y
module _ (P : C.Ob  Type ℓ) (pprop :  x  is-prop (P x))
  where
  import Cat.Reasoning (Restrict P) as R

We then prove that object-isomorphism pairs in the subcategory (i.e. inhabitants of B:R(AB)\sum_{B : \mathcal{R}} (A \cong B)) coincide with those in the supercategory; Hence, since C\mathcal{C} is by assumption univalent, so is R\mathcal{R}.

  Restrict-is-category : is-category C  is-category (Restrict P)
  Restrict-is-category cids = λ where
    .to-path im i .object  Univalent.iso→path cids (sub-iso→super-iso P im) i
    .to-path {a = a} {b = b} im i .witness  is-prop→pathp
       i  pprop (cids .to-path (sub-iso→super-iso P im) i))
      (a .witness) (b .witness) i
    .to-path-over p  R.≅-pathp _ _ λ i  cids .to-path-over (sub-iso→super-iso P p) i .C.to

From full inclusions🔗

There is another way of representing full subcategories: By giving a full inclusion, i.e. a fully faithful functor F:DCF : \mathcal{D} \to \mathcal{C}. Each full inclusion canonically determines a full subcategory of C\mathcal{C}, namely that consisting of the objects in C\mathcal{C} merely in the image of FF.

module _ {o' h'} {D : Precategory o' h'} {F : Functor D C} (ff : is-fully-faithful F) where
  open Functor F

  Full-inclusion→Full-subcat : Precategory _ _
  Full-inclusion→Full-subcat =
    Restrict  x  ∃[ d ∈ Ob D ] (F₀ d C.≅ x))

This canonical full subcategory is weakly equivalent to D\mathcal{D}, meaning that it admits a fully faithful, essentially surjective functor from D\mathcal{D}. This functor is actually just FF again:

  Ff-domain→Full-subcat : Functor D Full-inclusion→Full-subcat
  Ff-domain→Full-subcat .Functor.F₀ x = restrict (F₀ x) (inc (x , C.id-iso))
  Ff-domain→Full-subcat .Functor.F₁ = F₁
  Ff-domain→Full-subcat .Functor.F-id = F-id
  Ff-domain→Full-subcat .Functor.F-∘ = F-∘

  is-fully-faithful-domain→Full-subcat : is-fully-faithful Ff-domain→Full-subcat
  is-fully-faithful-domain→Full-subcat = ff

  is-eso-domain→Full-subcat : is-eso Ff-domain→Full-subcat
  is-eso-domain→Full-subcat yo =
    ∥-∥-map  (preimg , isom)  preimg , super-iso→sub-iso _ isom)
      (yo .witness)

Up to weak equivalence, admitting a full inclusion is equivalent to being a full subcategory: Every full subcategory admits a full inclusion, given on objects by projecting the first component and on morphisms by the identity function.

module _ {P : C.Ob  Type ℓ} where
  Forget-full-subcat : Functor (Restrict P) C
  Forget-full-subcat .Functor.F₀ = object
  Forget-full-subcat .Functor.F₁ f = f
  Forget-full-subcat .Functor.F-id = refl
  Forget-full-subcat .Functor.F-∘ f g i = f C.∘ g

  is-fully-faithful-Forget-full-subcat : is-fully-faithful Forget-full-subcat
  is-fully-faithful-Forget-full-subcat = id-equiv