I've got some code that relies on comparing two NSIndexPaths and executing different code based on their equality or lack thereof (using -isEqual). Most of the time it works properly, but sometimes it doesn't. I've used the debugger console to test the two indexpaths during code execution, and they look identical to me.

Here's the code:

- (BOOL)selectedStreetIsSameAsLastSelectedStreet
{
    return [self.indexPathOfSelectedStreet isEqual:self.previousObject.indexPathOfSelectedStreet];
}

Here's the output during the execution of the code:

(gdb) po self.indexPathOfSelectedStreet
<NSIndexPath 0x60a0770> 2 indexes [26, 1]
(gdb) po self.previousObject.indexPathOfSelectedStreet
<NSIndexPath 0x55b4f70> 2 indexes [26, 1]
(gdb) p (BOOL)[self.indexPathOfSelectedStreet isEqual:self.previousObject.indexPathOfSelectedStreet]
$2 = 0 '\000'

Am I doing something wrong, or is there another way I can reliably test the equality of two NSIndexPaths?

link|improve this question

feedback

1 Answer

up vote 12 down vote accepted

Try [indexPath1 compare: indexPath2] == NSOrderedSame.

Maybe you found a bug in NSIndexPath. If you try to create a new NSIndexPath with a path that already exists you should get that one instead. So isEqual: probably just compares the pointers and not the actual indices stored.

link|improve this answer
Perfect. Thanks for the quick response! – JoBu1324 Sep 24 '10 at 21:31
2  
I'm inclined to think this may be a bug as well. I am having the very same issue in iOS 4.2 b3. – Sedate Alien Oct 21 '10 at 5:48
I believe this is because -isEqual: is just doing a pointer comparison of the two index paths. – Brandon Williams Dec 14 '10 at 19:00
Sounds like a bug to me too. From the docs: "NSIndexPath objects are uniqued and shared. If an index path containing the specified index or indexes already exists, that object is returned instead of a new instance.". It appears this is not happening in your code. – StuDev Nov 8 '11 at 16:40
4  
As of iOS 5, NSIndexPath now implements an -isEqual: method to do what you're expecting. For backwards compatibility, the -compare: alternative is the best option. – Dave DeLong Nov 8 '11 at 17:27
show 1 more comment
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.