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Home/ Questions/Q 8784735
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T21:10:34+00:00 2026-06-13T21:10:34+00:00

Say I have a function that expects a block: void foo(Foo (^block)(Bar)); And say

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Say I have a function that expects a block:

void foo(Foo (^block)(Bar));

And say I have a function with the same signature, except not a block:

Foo myFunction(Bar);

I can do this:

foo(^(Bar bar) { return myFunction(bar); });

But I would rather do this, which would be equivalent if it worked:

foo(&myFunction);

If I try to, XCode says:

No matching function for call to 'foo'

A block is a function pointer together with some context, so on that level it seems reasonable to want to use a plain function pointer as a block with an empty context. Is it possible?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T21:10:35+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 9:10 pm

    A block is a function pointer together with some context, so on that
    level it seems reasonable to want to use a plain function pointer as a
    block with an empty context. Is it possible?

    The problem, though, is that a block is not a function pointer together with some context.

    A block captures executable code during compilation and state during execution. The executable code follows the C ABI in terms of passing arguments but, like method calls, it has some very specific requirements. Translating it to a C function declaration, a block that returns a BOOL and takes a single int argument would look like this:

    BOOL blockLikeFunc(void *block, int arg) { ... }
    

    That is, the first argument to the block’s “function” must be a pointer to the block itself.

    Thus, no, you can’t just rip out the block’s “function” pointer and cast it to/from a C function.

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