The bucket is computed from the hash code and the size of the array, but that's not necessarily the index. If there are no bucket collisions, then index==bucket and this works out. But if there are bucket collisions then the index will be different from the bucket. So you still need some computation IIUC. And there's no way to memoize that result, since memoization would require a hashmap that has the exact same characteristics as the original hashmap.
I guess a @Stable attribute on the array underlying the map would allow for the elimination of one redirection: in a mutable map the underlying array can get resized so its pointer isn't stable. With an annotated immutable map it could be (though IDK whether that'd work with GC defrag etc). But that seems like relatively small potatoes? I don't see a way to "pretend the map isn't even there".
I guess a @Stable attribute on the array underlying the map would allow for the elimination of one redirection: in a mutable map the underlying array can get resized so its pointer isn't stable. With an annotated immutable map it could be (though IDK whether that'd work with GC defrag etc). But that seems like relatively small potatoes? I don't see a way to "pretend the map isn't even there".