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Since you are not using equals as a logical comparison, but a physical one (i.e. it is the same object), the only way you will guarantee that the hashcode will return a unique value, is to implement a variation of your own suggestion. Instead of generating a random number, use UUID to generate an actual unique value for each object.

The System.identityHashCode() will work, most of the time, but is not guaranteed as the Object.hashCode() method is not guaranteed to return a unique value for every object. I have seen the marginal case happen, and it will probably be dependent on the VM implementation, which is not something you will want your code be dependent on.

Excerpt from the javadocs for Object.hashCode(): As much as is reasonably practical, the hashCode method defined by class Object does return distinct integers for distinct objects. (This is typically implemented by converting the internal address of the object into an integer, but this implementation technique is not required by the JavaTM programming language.)

The problem this addresses, is the case of having two separate point objects from overwriting each other when inserted into the hashmap because they both have the same hash. Since there is no logical equals, with the accompanying override of hashCode(), the identityHashCode method can actually cause this scenario to occur. Where the logical case would only replace hash entries for the same logical point, using the system based hash can cause it to occur with any two objects, equality (and even class) is no longer a factor.

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Since you are not using equals as a logical comparison, but a physical one (i.e. it is the same object), the only way you will guarantee that the hashcode will return a unique value, is to implement a variation of your own suggestion. Instead of generating a random number, use UUID to generate an actual unique value for each object.

The System.identityHashCode() will work, most of the time, but is not guaranteed as the Object.hashCode() method is not guaranteed to return a unique value for every object. I have seen the marginal case happen, and it will probably be dependent on the VM implementation, which is not something you will want your code be dependent on.

Excerpt from the javadocs for Object.hashCode(): As much as is reasonably practical, the hashCode method defined by class Object does return distinct integers for distinct objects. (This is typically implemented by converting the internal address of the object into an integer, but this implementation technique is not required by the JavaTM programming language.)