immutable - meaning and definition. What is immutable
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What (who) is immutable - definition

OBJECT WHOSE STATE CANNOT BE MODIFIED AFTER IT IS CREATED
Mutable object; Immutable objects; Immutable pattern; Mutable; Immutable class; Immutable value; Immutability; Immutable; Mutable variable

Immutable         
·adj Not mutable; not capable or susceptible of change; unchangeable; unalterable.
immutable         
a.
Unchangeable, invariable, unalterable, undeviating, inflexible, constant, permanent, stable, fixed.
immutable         
Something that is immutable will never change or cannot be changed. (FORMAL)
...the eternal and immutable principles of right and wrong.
ADJ

Wikipedia

Immutable object

In object-oriented and functional programming, an immutable object (unchangeable object) is an object whose state cannot be modified after it is created. This is in contrast to a mutable object (changeable object), which can be modified after it is created. In some cases, an object is considered immutable even if some internally used attributes change, but the object's state appears unchanging from an external point of view. For example, an object that uses memoization to cache the results of expensive computations could still be considered an immutable object.

Strings and other concrete objects are typically expressed as immutable objects to improve readability and runtime efficiency in object-oriented programming. Immutable objects are also useful because they are inherently thread-safe. Other benefits are that they are simpler to understand and reason about and offer higher security than mutable objects.

Examples of use of immutable
1. It is about belief, not reason, and is ordinarily immutable.
2. It wasn‘t preordained, immutable or indeed anything special.
3. Fate, luck or chance÷ each in its way is an immutable part of the human condition.
4. Goldberg describes the immutable alienation of Jews, even in America, even now.
5. This immutable fact is something her daughter Princess Beatrice quite clearly struggles to address.