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I have an array of NSDictionary. Each array item has a key named "Name". Now I want to remove duplicate entries based on this name value.

This work perfectly:

aMyArray = [aMyArray valueForKeyPath:@"@distinctUnionOfObjects.Name"];

The problem are that result array still contains duplicates string, based on the case. Ex: [@"Franck", "franck"]

How can I remove these duplicate?

Thanks

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  • What about applying -lowercaseString or capitalizedString or uppercaseString before filtering out the duplicates elements?
    – HepaKKes
    Apr 1, 2015 at 22:19
  • Because I need the case to be kept. (for the duplicate, I don't care which one will be removed)
    – Franck
    Apr 2, 2015 at 0:11
  • Ok, if you don't care you can always make a copy of the array and retrieve the "original" object by an UUID. If it's too expensive, you can use always an NSSet instead of an NSArray and override -isEqual and -hash of your class.
    – HepaKKes
    Apr 2, 2015 at 0:38

1 Answer 1

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You could try to do this

// in your class implementation 
- (BOOL)isEqual:(id)object {
    if (![object isKindOfClass:[self class]]) {
        return NO;
    }
    typeof(self) obj = (typeof(self))object;
    return ([self.Name caseInsensitiveCompare:obj.Name] == NSOrderedSame);
}

- (NSUInteger)hash
{
    return [[self.Name lowercaseString] hash];
}

// and then 
NSSet *distinctObjects = [[NSSet alloc] initWithArray:array];
NSArray *result = distinctObjects.allObjects;

Alternatively you could customise this KVC collection operator by swizzling valueForKeyPath: to parse your custom DSL, possibly winding up with something like

aMyArray = [aMyArray valueForKeyPath:@"@distinctUnionOfObjects[caseInsensitive].Name"];

which doesn't seem to be a good idea for me, but it certainly a viable solution to your problem.

2
  • 1
    Your -hash method is not valid for the given -isEqual: method. The rule is that, if -isEqual: considers two objects equal, then the -hash method must give the same hash value for both. If the two names differ by case, -[NSString hash] is likely to give different hashes, but your -isEqual: method will call them equal. Apr 6, 2015 at 0:23
  • Oops, I forgot to normalise Names before getting their hashes. Thanks
    – HepaKKes
    Apr 6, 2015 at 1:32

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