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Home/ Questions/Q 793297
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T22:07:44+00:00 2026-05-14T22:07:44+00:00

In the code snippet below – why do I have to give a type

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In the code snippet below – why do I have to give a type annotation for Nil?

Welcome to Scala version 2.8.0.RC2 (OpenJDK Server VM, Java 1.6.0_18).
Type in expressions to have them evaluated.
Type :help for more information.

scala> List(Some(1), Some(2), Some(3), None).foldLeft(Nil)((lst, o) => o match { case Some(i) => i::lst; case None => lst })          
<console>:6: error: type mismatch;
found   : List[Int]
required: object Nil
   List(Some(1), Some(2), Some(3), None).foldLeft(Nil)((lst, o) => o match { case Some(i) => i::lst; case None => lst })
                                                                                              ^

scala> List(Some(1), Some(2), Some(3), None).foldLeft(Nil:List[Int])((lst, o) => o match { case Some(i) => i::lst; case None => lst })
res1: List[Int] = List(3, 2, 1)
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T22:07:45+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 10:07 pm

    The problem is that Nil is an object that extends List. That means that Nil.type is a subclass of List and, therefore, the type for foldLeft‘s accumulator will be Nil.type.

    This is one place I wish Scala tried a bit (or a lot, whatever it takes 🙂 harder to get a better type inferred.

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