The
category of super vector spaces, denoted by \mathbb K-\mathrm{SVect}, is the
category whose
objects are super vector spaces (over a fixed field \mathbb K) and whose
morphisms are
even linear transformations (i.e. the grade preserving ones). The categorical approach to super linear algebra is to first formulate definitions and theorems regarding ordinary (ungraded) algebraic objects in the language of
category theory and then transfer these directly to the category of super vector spaces. This leads to a treatment of "superobjects" such as
superalgebras,
Lie superalgebras,
supergroups, etc. that is completely analogous to their ungraded counterparts. The category \mathbb K-\mathrm{SVect} is a
monoidal category with the super tensor product as the monoidal product and the purely even super vector space \mathbb K^{1|0} as the unit object. The involutive braiding operator :\tau_{V,W}: V\otimes W \rightarrow W\otimes V, given by :\tau_{V,W}(x\otimes y)=(-1)^y \otimes x on homogeneous elements, turns \mathbb K-\mathrm{SVect} into a
symmetric monoidal category. This commutativity isomorphism encodes the "rule of signs" that is essential to super linear algebra. It effectively says that a minus sign is picked up whenever two odd elements are interchanged. One need not worry about signs in the categorical setting as long as the above operator is used wherever appropriate. \mathbb K-\mathrm{SVect} is also a
closed monoidal category with the
internal Hom object, \mathbf{Hom}(V, W), given by the super vector space of
all linear maps from V to W. The ordinary \mathrm{Hom} set \mathrm{Hom}(V, W) is the even subspace therein: :\mathrm{Hom}(V, W) = \mathbf{Hom}(V,W)_0. The fact that \mathbb K-\mathrm{SVect} is closed means that the functor -\otimes V is
left adjoint to the functor \mathrm{Hom}(V, -), given a natural bijection :\mathrm{Hom}(U\otimes V, W) \cong \mathrm{Hom}(U,\mathbf{Hom}(V,W)). == Superalgebra ==