I believe I understand the basics of inline functions: instead of a function call resulting in parameters being placed on the stack and an invoke operation occurring, the definition of the function is copied at compile time to where the invocation was made, saving the invocation overhead at runtime.
So I want to know:
Does scalac use smarts to inline some functions (e.g. private def) without the hints from annotations?
How do I judge when it be a good idea to hint to scalac that it inlines a function?
Can anyone share examples of functions or invocations that should or shouldn't be inlined?