Background
Basic concepts
equivalences in/of -categories
Universal constructions
Local presentation
Theorems
Extra stuff, structure, properties
Models
The generalization of the notion of flat functor from category theory to (∞,1)-category theory.
As for 1-categorical flat functors, there is a general definition of flat functors that restricts, in the case when finite limits exist, to the condition that these are preserved.
For a regular cardinal, an (∞,1)-functor is -flat, if, when modeled as a morphism of quasicategories, for any left Kan fibration with a -cofiltered (∞,1)-category, the pullback (in sSet) is also -cofiltered.
If then we just say is flat.
The dual of this is HTT, def. 5.3.2.1, under the name “-right exact”. But in 1-category theory, the terminology “left/right exact” is almost universally reserved for the case when finite limits/colimits do exist, so we continue that tradition in the -case. We do have:
If has -small limits, then is -flat precisely if it preserves these -small limits.
In particular, if has all finite limits, then is flat precisely if it preserves these.
The dual of this is HTT, prop. 5.3.2.9.
-flat -functors are closed under composition.
Every (∞,1)-equivalence is -flat.
An -functor equivalent (in the (∞,1)-category of (∞,1)-functors) to a -flat one is itself -flat.
This is HTT, prop. 5.3.2.4.
For 1-categories, there are two notions of flat functor: the above corresponds to the “representable” one, while (for functors valued in a topos) there is also a notion of “internal flatness” (and a notion of “covering flatness” that generalizes them both. I do not know whether internally-flat or covering-flat -functors have been defined, but the following shows that left exact -functors valued in an -topos, at least, satisfy a condition that ought to characterize internally-flat ones.
If is an -category with finite limits, is an -topos, and preserves finite limits, then its Yoneda extension also preserves finite limits.
This is HTT, prop. 6.1.5.2.
Section 5.3.2 of
Last revised on July 23, 2018 at 10:23:28. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.