I need verification for some expression in definitions which I can't completely get. Although English isn't my natal language, I still find a confusion with these words, with which just a little bit of punctuation or tonnality can flip upside down the meaning of the mathematical concept.
- (...) Let $ S $ be the class of all sets; (...)
- (...) for $ A,B \in S $, $ hom(A,B) $ is the set of all functions $ f $ such that (...)
- (...) Let $ G $ be the category whose objects are all groups. (...)
The expression in bold keep appearing, and as long as I'm aware of the subject, sometimes meanings are like contradicting. So I wonder if:
They mean by the (1) that "all this class contains is some sets" OR "this is the class constructed by all possible sets",
"this set is of all about function-type objects inside" OR "this is the set containing every theoretically possible function"
"whose objects are all some elements qualified as groups" OR "is the category as the whole group-universe's elements as objects"
I tried above to reformulate the subtilities for the same expression different times.
Thank you for a helping hand.