Abbreviation: ASlat
An \emph{algebraic semilattice} is a complete semilattice $\mathbf{P}=\langle P,\leq \rangle $ such that
the set of compact elements below any element is directed and
every element is the join of all compact elements below it.
An element $c\in P$ is \emph{compact} if for every subset $S\subseteq P$ such that $c\le\bigvee S$, there exists a finite subset $S_0$ of $S$ such that $c\le\bigvee S_0$.
The set of compact elements of $P$ is denoted by $K(P)$.
Let $\mathbf{P}$ and $\mathbf{Q}$ be algebraic semilattices. A morphism from $\mathbf{P}$ to $\mathbf{Q}$ is a function $f:P\rightarrow Q$ that is \emph{Scott-continuous}, which means that $f$ preserves all directed joins:
$z=\bigvee D\Longrightarrow f(z)= \bigvee f[D]$
Example 1:
$\begin{array}{lr}
f(1)= &1
\end{array}$