What is the NSObject isEqual: and hash default function?

Brenden picture Brenden · Aug 6, 2009 · Viewed 12.3k times · Source

I have a database model class that is a NSObject. I have a set of these objects in a NSMutableArray. I use indexOfObject: to find a match. Problem is the model object's memory address changes. So I am overriding the hash method to return the model's row ID. This however does not fix it. I also have to override the isEqual: method to compare the value of the hash method.

What does the isEqual: method use to determine equality by default?

I'm assuming it uses the memory address. After reading the isEqual: documentation I thought it used the value from the hash method. Obviously, that is not the case as my attempt to override that value did not solve my initial problem.

Answer

Kenny Winker picture Kenny Winker · Nov 23, 2010

As you've correctly guessed, NSObject's default isEqual: behaviour is comparing the memory address of the object. Strangely, this is not presently documented in the NSObject Class Reference, but it is documented in the Introspection documentation, which states:

The default NSObject implementation of isEqual: simply checks for pointer equality.

Of course, as you are doubtless aware, subclasses of NSObject can override isEqual: to behave differently. For example, NSString's isEqual: method, when passed another NSString, will first check the address and then check for an exact literal match between the strings.