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I am having trouble understanding the concept between two things being equal and two things being identical. What confuses me is the statement "Two objects can be identical, which means they are equal. But, two object that are equal are not identical." Could someone please help me understand the difference? Thanks.

3 Answers 3

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in objective-c, slightly pseudo code...

NSString * a = @"hello";
NSString * b = @"hello";

a == a    //they are identical (the same object)
[a isEqualToString:a]; //they are equal.
a != b    //Even though the string contents are the same they are not the same object.
[a isEqualToString:b]; // they aren't identical but they are equal.

For a very long and good blog post on the topic see this

http://www.karlkraft.com/index.php/2008/01/07/equality-vs-identity/

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    I should know this, but I am blanking. Aren't == and "isEqual" the same thing?
    – David
    Jan 24, 2012 at 22:09
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    Not in objective-c. Variables are pointers to objects in memory. == compares pointers. isEqualToString: compares the actual characters of the strings.
    – jackslash
    Jan 24, 2012 at 22:10
  • Ok. So == is like saying "See if these two people live on the same street" (street being the address in memory and people being the objects). And isEqualToString is asking if those two people have the same name?
    – David
    Jan 24, 2012 at 22:21
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    Actually, in Objective-C, I think Dave is right for the case of NSStrings and a few other types, but not all NSObjects. See my answer my below for clarification.
    – rvijay007
    Apr 6, 2013 at 0:03
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    @jackslash from Apple docs: "The default NSObject implementation of isEqual: simply checks for pointer equality." This should be the same as ==, which is what was saying. Your example compares == to isEqualToString: which is a different method altogether. link
    – nvrtd frst
    Apr 6, 2013 at 0:09
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Welcome to the world of boxes... (this works a lot better with pictures, apologies I haven't included any)

Preamble

When you write:

int x;

you are asking for a box which is capable of holding an int and to equate the name of that with x - all boxes have an internal name, what it exactly is is unimportant. So now when you write:

x = 4;

you asking to store the value 4 in the box referenced by the name x. A box is often called a "variable". This use of boxes is why computer programming is different from mathematics, you can write:

x = x + 1;

in computer programming, but not in maths! It means "go to the box referenced by x, copy the value out, add 1 it to, put the value back into the same box".

Now boxes of different types (meaning what can be stored in them) can be "glued" together to form multi-compartment boxes. The whole collection is referred to by a single name, and the individual boxes by two names - the one for the collection and the one for the individual box. Such collections of boxes appear in different programming languages under the terms "record", "structure", "object" etc.

And finally, what can you put in a box? The answer (depending on the rules of the programming language) is anything and this includes the names of other boxes. E.g. you can write:

int *y;

which asks for a box capable of holding the "name of a box which holds an integer" and to call this box y. Such boxes are often called "pointer variables" or "reference variables"

== vs. isEqual

In Objective-C the == operator looks at the contents of two boxes and determines whether they contain the same value - and that value might well be the name of another box.

The isEqual method operates only on boxes (of certain restricted types) which contain the names of other boxes. It looks into the two boxes, uses the names in those boxes to locate two more boxes, and then compares the contents of those boxes. If the boxes it is comparing themselves contain other boxes which contain names of yet further boxes then it traverses to those further boxes to compare them, etc.

Furthermore isEqual does not need to compare for exact equality, but is allowed to compare for "means the same thing". E.g. if you create two dictionaries which contain the same key/value pairs but they are entered in different orders then the arrangement of boxes that make up those two dictionaries may not be identical, but semantically they are the same - the isEqualDictionary: method is defined as:

Two dictionaries have equal contents if they each hold the same number of entries and, for a given key, the corresponding value objects in each dictionary satisfy the isEqual: test.

Conclusion

The == operator is usually only used for "primitive" data types - int, float, NSInteger etc. - and structures of such types - e.g. NSRect. These are the types where the values determine equality.

The isEqual: method is is usually used for Obj-C objects - you usually don't want to know whether to boxes contain the same name (which is what == would determine), but whether what those names refer to are semantically equivalent - which is what isEqual: determines.

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Identical generally means they are the same object in memory (occupy the same memory footprint). Equal usually means their attribute values are the same.

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