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If you send isEqual: to an object that happens to be nil, you always get NO back.

Is this the expected behavior? To be a feature instead of a bug, I would expect it to return YES if the other object is also nil, and NO otherwise? Semantically this seems the correct behavior.

In case my expectations are incorrect, what the recommended proceedure? Check for nil before sending isEqual: (and friends)?

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3 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

Yes, this is the expected behavior. See sending messages to nil. Any message to nil will return a result which is the equivalent to 0 for the type requested. Since the 0 for a boolean is NO, that is the result.

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As mentioned above, this is expected behaviour from Objective-C. This basically means that doing this

if ([nil isEqual:nil]) { ... }

evaluates to NO. Even though it doesn't make sense, when looking at it - and even though it's annoying - being able to send messages to nil is actually one of the really cool things about Objective-C. Saves you a lot of code sometimes.

My solution is to define this macro somewhere handy

#define IsEqual(x,y) ((x && [x isEqual:y]) || (!x && !y))

So when I need to test if two objects are equal:

if (IsEqual(obj1, obj2)) { ... }

or not equal:

if (!IsEqual(obj1, obj2)) { ... }

Hope this helps

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1  
[nil isEqual:@"Not nil"] evaluates to NO, and that totally does "make sense". I think you mean "[nil isEqual:nil]", which also evaluates to NO? – fishinear Oct 31 '12 at 16:13
You're right. Thanks for pointing that out. It has been corrected. – Trenskow Nov 7 '12 at 12:52
Now, six months later, it has finally been corrected. – Trenskow May 1 at 8:27
I would rather make that macro: "(x == y) || [x isEqual:y]", which covers all cases as well, and avoids the slow method call in the common special case. As an aside, you would still need the normal constructs to avoid double evaluation of x and y, it is a macro after all. – fishinear May 1 at 11:17

It is expected, for two reasons: (1) in Objective-C, sending a message to nil always returns a false-y value (nil, NO, 0, 0.0, etc.; or, more generally speaking, 0, which can be interpreted based on the expected return type of the method); (2) nil represents an unknown value, and two unknown values are not necessarily equal to each other.

If you want to see if an object is nil, use if (!obj) or if (obj == nil).

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