Function composition

Function composition refers to the "gluing" together of two functions using a dyadic operator such that the functions are applied to the argument(s) as normal, but in a particular pattern specific to the used operator. The term function composition comes from traditional mathematics where it is used for a function $$h(x)=f(g(x))$$ when written as $$ h(x) = (f \circ g)(x)$$. APL generalises this idea to dyadic functions, allowing various patterns of application in addition to the simple application of one monadic function to the result of another monadic function. The three main patterns, represented by Atop, Beside, and Over can be visualised as follows:


 * Compositions.png

When any of these are applied monadically, the dotted branch falls away, and they are all equivalent to each other and to $$(f \circ g)(x)$$ of traditional mathematics.

Additional compositions
Additional compositions are possible, even without using an argument more than once or applying a function to its own result. However, most of these are rather trivial shuffled-around versions of the above three. For example, one could define an operator identical to Atop, only that it applies the right operand to the result of the left operand, that is.

When Dyalog added Atop and Over, it was with the reasoning that these were the only compositions where the leftmost function acted as the "root" function in the evaluation tree, while the arguments were used each on their respective sides of the constituent functions:



Of note here is  which is equivalent to — although with swapped operands — Reverse-compose   (also called Before), and the mirrored version of Beside   (also known as Compose and After), because it is the only such variation that has been implemented, namely in dzaima/APL and Extended Dyalog APL.

A compositional operator that isn't just a shuffled around version of the basic three, is one that applies one operand between the other operand's dyadic result and the result of that other operand's result when swapped:. This operator can for example be used to implement three-way comparison: Try it online!