Sending a message to nil?
- by Ryan Delucchi
As a Java developer who is reading Apple's Objective-C 2.0 documentation: I wonder as to what sending a message to nil means - let alone how it is actually useful. Taking an excerpt from the documentation:
There are several patterns in Cocoa
that take advantage of this fact. The
value returned from a message to nil
may also be valid:
If the method returns an object, any pointer type, any integer scalar
of size less than or equal to
sizeof(void*), a float, a double, a
long double, or a long long, then a
message sent to nil returns 0.
If the method returns a struct, as defined by the Mac OS X ABI Function
Call Guide to be returned in
registers, then a message sent to nil
returns 0.0 for every field in the
data structure. Other struct data
types will not be filled with zeros.
If the method returns anything other than the aforementioned value
types the return value of a message
sent to nil is undefined.
Has Java rendered my brain incapable of grokking the explanation above? Or is there something that I am missing that would make this as clear as glass?
Note: Yes, I do get the idea of messages/receivers in Objective-C, I am simply confused about a receiver that happens to be nil.