I am wondering how is defined the equality of functors, seems that it is only necessary to show their equality on objects and morphisms, is it necessary to show that the natural transformation between them is the identity?
Thanks for any suggestion
I am wondering how is defined the equality of functors, seems that it is only necessary to show their equality on objects and morphisms, is it necessary to show that the natural transformation between them is the identity?
Thanks for any suggestion
There is no "the natural transformation between them". There is no natural transformation involved at all. If two functors are equal on all objects and equal on all morphisms, then they are equal, since a functor by definition is just a function on objects together with a function on morphisms (satisfying certain axioms).