Class ImmutableCollection<E>
- All Implemented Interfaces:
- Serializable,- Iterable<E>,- Collection<E>
- Direct Known Subclasses:
- ImmutableList,- ImmutableMultiset,- ImmutableSet
Collection whose contents will never change, and which offers a few additional
 guarantees detailed below.
 Warning: avoid direct usage of ImmutableCollection as a type (just as
 with Collection itself). Prefer subtypes such as ImmutableSet or ImmutableList, which have well-defined Object.equals(java.lang.Object) semantics, thus avoiding a common source
 of bugs and confusion.
 
About all Immutable- collections
 The remainder of this documentation applies to every public Immutable- type in this
 package, whether it is a subtype of ImmutableCollection or not.
 
Guarantees
Each makes the following guarantees:
- Shallow immutability. Elements can never be added, removed or replaced in this
       collection. This is a stronger guarantee than that of Collections.unmodifiableCollection(java.util.Collection<? extends T>), whose contents change whenever the wrapped collection is modified.
- Null-hostility. This collection will never contain a null element.
- Deterministic iteration. The iteration order is always well-defined, depending on
       how the collection was created. Typically this is insertion order unless an explicit
       ordering is otherwise specified (e.g. ImmutableSortedSet.naturalOrder()). See the appropriate factory method for details. View collections such asImmutableMultiset.elementSet()iterate in the same order as the parent, except as noted.
- Thread safety. It is safe to access this collection concurrently from multiple threads.
- Integrity. This type cannot be subclassed outside this package (which would allow these guarantees to be violated).
"Interfaces", not implementations
These are classes instead of interfaces to prevent external subtyping, but should be thought
 of as interfaces in every important sense. Each public class such as ImmutableSet is a
 type offering meaningful behavioral guarantees. This is substantially different from the
 case of (say) HashSet, which is an implementation, with semantics that were
 largely defined by its supertype.
 
For field types and method return types, you should generally use the immutable type (such as
 ImmutableList) instead of the general collection interface type (such as List).
 This communicates to your callers all of the semantic guarantees listed above, which is almost
 always very useful information.
 
On the other hand, a parameter type of ImmutableList is generally a nuisance to
 callers. Instead, accept Iterable and have your method or constructor body pass it to the
 appropriate copyOf method itself.
 
Expressing the immutability guarantee directly in the type that user code references is a
 powerful advantage. Although Java offers certain immutable collection factory methods, such as
 Collections.singleton(Object) and Set.of,
 we recommend using these classes instead for this reason (as well as for consistency).
 
Creation
Except for logically "abstract" types like ImmutableCollection itself, each 
 Immutable type provides the static operations you need to obtain instances of that type. These
 usually include:
 
- Static methods named of, accepting an explicit list of elements or entries.
- Static methods named copyOf(orcopyOfSorted), accepting an existing collection whose contents should be copied.
- A static nested Builderclass which can be used to populate a new immutable instance.
Warnings
- Warning: as with any collection, it is almost always a bad idea to modify an element
       (in a way that affects its Object.equals(java.lang.Object)behavior) while it is contained in a collection. Undefined behavior and bugs will result. It's generally best to avoid using mutable objects as elements at all, as many users may expect your "immutable" object to be deeply immutable.
Performance notes
- Implementations can be generally assumed to prioritize memory efficiency, then speed of access, and lastly speed of creation.
- The copyOfmethods will sometimes recognize that the actual copy operation is unnecessary; for example,copyOf(copyOf(anArrayList))should copy the data only once. This reduces the expense of habitually making defensive copies at API boundaries. However, the precise conditions for skipping the copy operation are undefined.
- Warning: a view collection such as ImmutableMap.keySetorImmutableList.subList(int, int)may retain a reference to the entire data set, preventing it from being garbage collected. If some of the data is no longer reachable through other means, this constitutes a memory leak. Pass the view collection to the appropriatecopyOfmethod to obtain a correctly-sized copy.
- The performance of using the associated Builderclass can be assumed to be no worse, and possibly better, than creating a mutable collection and copying it.
- Implementations generally do not cache hash codes. If your element or key type has a slow
       hashCodeimplementation, it should cache it itself.
Example usage
class Foo {
  private static final ImmutableSet<String> RESERVED_CODES =
      ImmutableSet.of("AZ", "CQ", "ZX");
  private final ImmutableSet<String> codes;
  public Foo(Iterable<String> codes) {
    this.codes = ImmutableSet.copyOf(codes);
    checkArgument(Collections.disjoint(this.codes, RESERVED_CODES));
  }
}
See also
See the Guava User Guide article on immutable collections.
- Since:
- 2.0
- See Also:
- 
Nested Class SummaryNested ClassesModifier and TypeClassDescriptionstatic classAbstract base class for builders ofImmutableCollectiontypes.
- 
Method SummaryModifier and TypeMethodDescriptionfinal booleanDeprecated.Unsupported operation.final booleanaddAll(Collection<? extends E> newElements) Deprecated.Unsupported operation.asList()Returns anImmutableListcontaining the same elements, in the same order, as this collection.final voidclear()Deprecated.Unsupported operation.abstract booleanabstract UnmodifiableIterator<E> iterator()Returns an unmodifiable iterator across the elements in this collection.final booleanDeprecated.Unsupported operation.final booleanremoveAll(Collection<?> oldElements) Deprecated.Unsupported operation.final booleanretainAll(Collection<?> elementsToKeep) Deprecated.Unsupported operation.final Object[]toArray()toArray(T[] other) Methods inherited from class java.util.AbstractCollectioncontainsAll, isEmpty, size, toStringMethods inherited from class java.lang.Objectclone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, waitMethods inherited from interface java.util.Collectionequals, hashCode, parallelStream, removeIf, stream, toArray
- 
Method Details- 
iteratorReturns an unmodifiable iterator across the elements in this collection.- Specified by:
- iteratorin interface- Collection<E>
- Specified by:
- iteratorin interface- Iterable<E>
- Specified by:
- iteratorin class- AbstractCollection<E>
 
- 
spliterator- Specified by:
- spliteratorin interface- Collection<E>
- Specified by:
- spliteratorin interface- Iterable<E>
 
- 
toArray- Specified by:
- toArrayin interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- toArrayin class- AbstractCollection<E>
 
- 
toArray- Specified by:
- toArrayin interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- toArrayin class- AbstractCollection<E>
 
- 
contains- Specified by:
- containsin interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- containsin class- AbstractCollection<E>
 
- 
addDeprecated.Unsupported operation.Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified.- Specified by:
- addin interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- addin class- AbstractCollection<E>
- Throws:
- UnsupportedOperationException- always
 
- 
removeDeprecated.Unsupported operation.Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified.- Specified by:
- removein interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- removein class- AbstractCollection<E>
- Throws:
- UnsupportedOperationException- always
 
- 
addAllDeprecated.Unsupported operation.Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified.- Specified by:
- addAllin interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- addAllin class- AbstractCollection<E>
- Throws:
- UnsupportedOperationException- always
 
- 
removeAllDeprecated.Unsupported operation.Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified.- Specified by:
- removeAllin interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- removeAllin class- AbstractCollection<E>
- Throws:
- UnsupportedOperationException- always
 
- 
retainAllDeprecated.Unsupported operation.Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified.- Specified by:
- retainAllin interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- retainAllin class- AbstractCollection<E>
- Throws:
- UnsupportedOperationException- always
 
- 
clearDeprecated.Unsupported operation.Guaranteed to throw an exception and leave the collection unmodified.- Specified by:
- clearin interface- Collection<E>
- Overrides:
- clearin class- AbstractCollection<E>
- Throws:
- UnsupportedOperationException- always
 
- 
asListReturns anImmutableListcontaining the same elements, in the same order, as this collection.Performance note: in most cases this method can return quickly without actually copying anything. The exact circumstances under which the copy is performed are undefined and subject to change. - Since:
- 2.0
 
 
-