What you've described should work for the cases where it can be determined at 
compile time that the object is indeed a MyImmutableList being utilized, but 
just like in Java there are cases where your list might have been assigned to a 
Collection or List variable such that the compiler cannot tell that it is 
really a MyImmutableList until runtime.

Also, overriding all of the to-be-denied methods to throw UnsupportedOperation 
would ensure that anything that cannot be caught at compile-time would still be 
caught at runtime.
-Spencer
    On Wednesday, August 2, 2023 at 07:13:16 AM EDT, Saravanan Palanichamy 
<chava...@gmail.com> wrote:  
 
 Hello Groovy users/devs
I have a derived class from List (lets call this MyImmutableList) and I want to 
only allow the use of certain extension functions. For example, collect is ok, 
but left shift is not

myImmutableList << 100 // I want to prevent this because its an immutable 
list)myImmutableList.collect { it + 1 } // This is ok

How do I achieve this? I have my own AST transformations and I can detect the 
use of the MyImmutableList class. My first guess is 
   
   - Enable Static compile
   - Post static compile, detect all extension methods and the object 
inferred_type it is called on. If type is MyImmutableList, check if extension 
method is allow listed. If not cause compile error
I am not sure if this is fool proof. Are there easier ways to do this? Is it 
possible to get the static compile mechanism to tie unknown methods to a 
default method that I can check for and just error on? 

regardsSaravanan
  

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