*
is for a plain old c pointer. ^
is for a block (proc, closure, lambda). Specifically, a block in Objective-C is implemented as a Closure.
^
is essentially a function pointer with some scope-related side-effects that discriminately copy the necessary objects and primitives so that when the block (function) is called, the variables in the block are a copy of the ones that were in the external scope where the block was defined.
Blocks are a very large and somewhat complex topic in Objective-C. You can find a very concise overview here.
The BIG comprehensive stuff can be found here in Apple's documentation.
EDIT:
In your specific example...
-(void) sort
{
[book sortUsingComparator:
^(id obj1, id obj2) {
return [obj1 compareNames: obj2];
} ];
}
The method sortUsingComparator:
takes an anonymous block as a parameter. The simplified block signature is ^(id obj1, id obj)
. Simplified meaning that since the return type is void
, it can be left out. What makes this example confusing to many people is that the block is actually defined in-line, right in the middle of a method call.
This code would be easier to read if the block were first declared with a descriptive name and then defined like any other c function, and then the name used in the method call. But, it seems that most developers don't do that.