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I've created a class Matrix in Groovy, and overloaded the multiply() function so that I can easily write things like:

Matrix m1 = [[1.0, 0.0],[0.0,1.0]]
Matrix m2 = m1 * 2.0
Matrix m3 = m1 * m2
Matrix m4 = m1 * [[5.0],[10.0]]

But now, let's say I write:

Matrix m5 = 2.0 * m1
Matrix m6 = [[5.0,10.0]] * m1

These two lines produce an error because the classes BigDecimal and ArrayList cannot be multiplied by a Matrix.

Is there a way to overload multiply() for these classes? (I know I could just extend these two classes, but then is there a way to tell Groovy to use the extended classes when compiling code?)

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You can overload the multiply() method in BigDecimal and ArrayList. Extending the classes will not work as you'd like because Groovy will not create instances of your subclasses from BigDecimal and List literals.

My first recommendation is to simply stick with the syntax in which the Matrix instance is the receiver of the multiply() method. Ex: matrix.multiply(whatever). This is to avoid having to create a bunch of duplicate multiply() implementations. Ex. Matrix.multiply(BigInteger) and BigInteger.multiply(Matrix).

An example

Regardless, here's an example of how to add matrix math methods to to BigDecimal and List:

Matrix m1 = [[1.0, 0.0],[0.0,1.0]]
def m2 = m1 * 2.0
def m3 = m1 * m2

use(MatrixMath) {
    def m4 = 2.0 * m1
    def m5 = [[5.0,10.0]] * m1
}

/*
 * IMPORTANT: This is a dummy Matrix implementation.
 * I was bored to death during this particular
 * math lesson.
 * In other words, the matrix math is all made up!
 */
@groovy.transform.TupleConstructor
class Matrix {
    List<List> matrix

    Matrix multiply(BigDecimal number) {
        matrix*.collect { it * 2 }
    }

    Matrix multiply(Matrix other) {
        (matrix + other.matrix)
            .transpose()
            .flatten()
            .collate(2)
            .collect { it[0] * it[1] }
            .collate(2)
    }
}

class MatrixMath {
    static Matrix multiply(BigDecimal number, Matrix matrix) {
        matrix * number
    }

    static Matrix multiply(List list, Matrix matrix) {
        matrix * (list as Matrix)
    }
}

This example uses a Groovy Category. I chose a Category to keep the multiply() implementations together in one class.

If a Matrix is little more than a List<List>, notice that with this approach you can actually get rid of the Matrix class. Instead, you can put all of the multiply() implementations into the MatrixMath Category, and use a List<List> as your matrix.

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