In my app, I have a NSDictionary whose keys should be instances of a subclass of NSManagedObject.
The problem, however, is that NSMa
There are four options:
[object objectID] or +[NSValue valueWithNonretainedObject:] seem the most obviousCFDictionaryCreateMutable() to create a dictionary with retained keys, rather than copied, instead, and then call CFDictionarySetValue() to store the objects[NSMapTable mapTableWithStrongToStrongObjects] gives you a purely Objective-C equivalent to CFMutableDictionaryNSCopying for your managed object subclass, such that it returns self (with a bumped reference count if you're not using ARC)+valueWithNonretainedObject: is pretty dangerous, since it's possible to be left with a dangling pointer; likely best to avoid.
Storing object IDs is fine, apart from the fact that new objects start out life with a temporary ID. That ID then changes to a permanent one when the context is saved to disk (or -obtainPermanentIDsForObjects:… is called). Your mapping code needs to be smart enough to handle this unless it can guarantee that all incoming objects already have a permanent ID.
Implementing NSCopying like this feels a bit icky, but should work just fine. As it happens, this is exactly the approach NSURLSessionTask takes, I presume for dictionary friendliness.
Prior to OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, it used to be possible to create a regular NSMutableDictionary and then call CFDictionarySetValue() for it. That's no longer the case though; new dictionaries now have proper copy callbacks specified down at the CF level, rather than purely being a feature of NSMutableDictionary.