In the mathematical theory of categories, a sketch is a category D, together with a set of cones intended to be limits and a set of cocones intended to be colimits. A model of the sketch in a category C is a functor
that takes each specified cone to a limit cone in C and each specified cocone to a colimit cocone in C. Morphisms of models are natural transformations. Sketches are a general way of specifying structures on the objects of a category, forming a category-theoretic analog to the logical concept of a theory and its models. They allow multisorted models and models in any category.
Sketches were invented in 1968 by Charles Ehresmann, using a different but equivalent definition. There are still other definitions in the research literature.
Adámek, Jiří; Rosický, Jiří (1994), Locally Presentable and Accessible Categories, London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series, vol. 189, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, doi:10.1017/CBO9780511600579, ISBN0-521-42261-2, MR1294136.
Ehresmann, Charles (1968), "Esquisses et types des structures algébriques", Bul. Inst. Politehn. Iaşi, New Series, 14 (18) (fasc. 1-2): 1–14, MR0238918.
Johnstone, Peter T. (2002), Sketches of an elephant: a topos theory compendium. Vol. 2, Oxford Logic Guides, vol. 44, Oxford: The Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press, ISBN0-19-851598-7, MR2063092.
Makkai, Michael; Paré, Robert (1989), Accessible Categories: The Foundations of Categorical Model Theory, Contemporary Mathematics, vol. 104, Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society, ISBN0-8218-5111-X, MR1031717.