I haven't work with Objective-C, but have use closures in C, C++, Object Pascal, Delphi, Javascript. "Closure" is a very ambigous term, and it's implementation in code, differs from one programming language from another, as well as a math term.
That's why we have "blocks", "callbacks", "function pointers", "method references", blah.
Basically, a "closure" is a function that is used as a data. Programmers store the function reference in a variable or parameter, and instead of been call inmediatly, is used when required. Since we can have "function variables", the same variable can be used to execute different closures.
Since you mention "Objective C", who is also Object Oriented, the way to use "closure" is different if you want to use closures for methods or closures for global functions.
Example with "Plain C":
typedef int (*ClosureType)(int a, int b);
int add(int a, int b)
{
return a + b;
}
int substract(int a, int b)
{
return a - b;
}
int multiply(int a, int b)
{
return a * b;
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
ClosureType functions[3] = { add, substract, multiply };
int option = 0;
printf("Operation Menu:\n");
printf("(1) Addition:\n");
printf("(2) Substraction:\n");
printf("(3) Multiplication:\n");
printf("Select an operation\n");
scanf("%d", &option);
int r = -1;
switch () {
case 1:
r = functions[0] (3, 4);
break;
case 2:
r = functions[1] (3, 4);
break;
case 3:
r = functions[2] (3, 4);
break;
default
break;
}
printf("The result of %d and %d: %d\n", 3, 4, r);
getch()("\n");
return 0;
}