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Home/ Questions/Q 6870975
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T03:44:57+00:00 2026-05-27T03:44:57+00:00

In a recent StackOverflow answer , I gave the following recursive code: def retry[T](n:

  • 0

In a recent StackOverflow answer, I gave the following recursive code:

def retry[T](n: Int)(fn: => T): T = {
  try {
    fn
  } catch {
    case e if n > 1 =>
      retry(n - 1)(fn)
  }
}

If I add the @tailrec annotation, I get:

Could not optimize @tailrec annotated method retry: it contains a
recursive call not in tail position.

I was able to hack a tail-recursive alternative, but I still wonder why this didn’t optimize. Why not?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T03:44:58+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 3:44 am

    To be tail-recursion optimized, this has to be transformed into something like the following:

    def retry[T](n: Int)(fn: => T): T = {
      START:
        try {
          fn
        } catch {
          case e if n > 1 =>
            n = n - 1
            GOTO START
        }
    }
    

    When it executes the GOTO to loop, it has to leave to scope of the catch block. But in the original recursive version, the execution of the recursive call is still within the catch block. If the language allows that this could ever potentially change the meaning of the code, then this wouldn’t be a valid optimization.

    EDIT: From discussion with Rex Kerr in the comments, this is a behaviour-preserving transformation in Scala (but only when there is no finally). So apparently it’s just that the Scala compiler doesn’t yet recognise that the last call of a catch block where there is no finally is in a tail-call position.

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