In the nLab page for partial map classifiers it is stated: two partial maps (between $A$ and $B$) are considered equal if they are related by an isomorphism of spans; in this way we obtain a set of partial maps $\text{Par}_{\mathbf{c}}(A,B)$.
Why should $\text{Par}_{\mathbf{C}}(A,B)$ be a set?
It then goes on to say that we can compose a partial map $A\leftarrow D\rightarrow B$ with a map $B\to B'$ in the obvious way (i assume $A\leftarrow D\rightarrow B'$ with $D\to B'$ the composition of $D\to B$ and $B\to B'$) and that we can compose $A\rightharpoonup B$ with a map $A'\to A$ by pulling back the mono $D\to A$ along $A'$. This way we get a functor $\text{Par}_{\mathbf{C}}(-,-):\mathbf{C}^{op}\times\mathbf{C}\to\textbf{Set}$. The paragraph finishes saying: In this way $\text{Par}_{\mathbf{C}}(-,-)$ becomes a profunctor from $\mathbf{C}$ to itself. (In fact, it is the hom-set of another category with the same objects as $\mathbf{C}$).
I guess that proving that $\text{Par}_{\mathbf{C}}(-,-)$ is a functor is not really difficult but I'm having trouble understanding the last part in brackets: does it refer to a functor from a category $\mathbf{C}_{par}$ whose objects are those of $\mathbf{C}$ and whose morphisms are partial maps?
Can someone explain the paragraphs in the nLab with some detail please?
Thanks!