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This entry deals with basic properties of monomorphisms and related notions (as extremal and regular monomorphisms, retractions etc) as well as the dual notions.
Monomorphisms (epimorphisms, bimorphisms) are closed under composition.
Proposition 1 If $\Map fAB$ , $\Map gBC$ are monomorphisms (epimorphisms, bimorphisms) then $g\circ f$ is a monomorphism (epimorphism, bimorphism).
Proposition 2 Let $f\circ g$ be a monomorphism. Then $g$ is a monomorphism.
Dual claim: If $g\circ f$ is an epimorphism, then $g$ is an epimorphism.
Retractions and sections are closed under composition.
Proposition 3 If $\Map fAB$ , $\Map gBC$ are retractions (sections, isomorphisms), then $g\circ f$ is a retraction (section, isomorphism).
Proof. Suppose we are given $\Map hBA$ , $\Map kCB$ such that $f\circ h=id_B$ , $g\circ k=id_C$ . Then $(g\circ f)\circ(h\circ k)=g\circ(f\circ h)\circ k=g\circ id_B\circ k=g\circ k=id_C$ . Thus we have shown the first part of the claim. The second part is dual to the first one and the third one follows from the first two. 
Proposition 4 Let $\Map fAB$ , $\Map gBC$ be morphisms. If $g\circ f$ is a section then $f$ is a section. If $g\circ f$ is a retraction then $g$ is a retraction.
Proof. If $g\circ f$ is a section then there exists a morphism $h$ such that $h\circ(g\circ f)=(h\circ g)\circ f=id_A$ , thus $f$ is a section as well. 
Proposition 5 Every section is a monomorphism. Every retraction is an epimorphism.
Proof. Let $\Map fAB$ be a section and $\Map gBA$ be the left inverse to $f$ , i.e., $\Map gBA$ , $g\circ f=id_A$ . If $f\circ h=f\circ k$ then $h=id_A\circ h=g\circ f\circ h=g\circ f\circ k=id_A\circ k=k$ . The duality principle yields the second part of the claim. 
Recall that a morphism is called an isomorphism if it is a section and a retraction at the same time.
Lemma 1 If $\Map fAB$ , $\Map{g,h}BA$ are morphisms such that $g\circ f=id_A$ and $f\circ h=id_B$ then $g=h$ .
Proof. $h=id_A\circ h=(g\circ f)\circ h=g\circ(f\circ h)=g\circ id_B=g$ 
Proposition 6 A morphism $\Map fAB$ is an isomorphism if and only if there exists a morphism $\Map gBA$ such that $g\circ f=id_A$ , $f\circ g=id_B$ . The morphism $g$ is determined uniquely.
Proof. The implication $\boxed{\Leftarrow}$ is obvious. The implication
 follows from the above lemma. 
The morphism $g$ from the above proposition is called the inverse of $f$ and denoted by $f^{-1}$ .
As an easy corollary we get:
Proposition 7 If $f$ is an isomorphism then also $\inv f$ is an isomorphism.
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