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The 1977 [https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Index:AIM-443.djvu AI Lab Memo 443] talks more broadly about how tail calls are like goto statements that you can pass arguments to. Huge shout-out to the folks at Wikisource that transcribed this to an accessible text form.
The 1977 [https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Index:AIM-443.djvu AI Lab Memo 443] talks more broadly about how tail calls are like goto statements that you can pass arguments to. Huge shout-out to the folks at Wikisource that transcribed this to an accessible text form.


The significant downside of tail call optimization from a user perspective is that it can make debugging more difficult as you lack a proper stack trace.
The significant downside of tail call optimization is that it can make debugging more difficult as you lack a proper stack trace.
 
From an implementer perspective the problem is that stack cleanup is tricky: A function that tail calls another cannot clean up any temporary variables it passes along. The solution to this is to make sure function stack use is identical and have the caller clean up, or to implement garbage collection.


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