In the area of abstract algebra known as ring theory, a left perfect ring is a type of ring over which all left modules have projective covers. The right case is defined by analogy, and the condition is not left-right symmetric; that is, there exist rings which are perfect on one side but not the other. Perfect rings were introduced in Bass's book.
A semiperfect ring is a ring over which every finitely generated left module has a projective cover. This property is left-right symmetric.
The following equivalent definitions of a left perfect ring R are found in Anderson and Fuller:
For a left perfect ring R:
Let R be ring. Then R is semiperfect if any of the following equivalent conditions hold:
Examples of semiperfect rings include:
Since a ring R is semiperfect iff every simple left R-module has a projective cover, every ring Morita equivalent to a semiperfect ring is also semiperfect.
For a fixed semiperfect ring R, there is (up to a ring isomorphism) a canonical representative of the class of rings Morita equivalent to R called a basic ring for R. A semiperfect ring is basic if and only if R/J(R) is a direct product of division rings.
Given a complete orthogonal set e<sub>1</sub>, ..., e<sub>n</sub> of local idempotents, we can assume ordering of this set in such a way that the for some iâ¤n the right modules e<sub>1</sub>R, ..., e<sub>i</sub>R form a complete set of finitely generated projective right modules. The idempotent e=e<sub>1</sub>+ ... + e<sub>i</sub> is then called a basic idempotent and the corner ring B:=eRe isomorphic to End<sub>R</sub>(e<sub>1</sub>R + ...+ e<sub>i</sub> R) is the basic ring for R.
The map IâÂÂIR defines embedding of the lattice of right ideals of B into that of R. The map IâÂÂRIR defines an isomorphism of the lattice of ideals of B and the lattice of ideals of R. This isomorphism respects multiplication of ideals.