Anything you pass can be interpreted as a point.  You could pass an NSString, 
but those are still pointers, and you can interpret a pointer as a regular 
number.  You could pass a character, but characters are also numbers.  In fact, 
everything in C can be interpreted as a number (this is often viewed as one of 
the limitations of C-based and similar languages).  The only real way around 
this is to pass a special point that you test for.

An example of this is when you ask NSString for a range of a substring.  It 
returns an NSRange, and the location is always a valid number.  However, we 
look for a special value, NSNotFound (which is just a really really big number) 
to indicate that the string wasn't present.

So you could pass a point that's basically {INFINITY, INFINITY} (or something 
like that).

But the real question here is "what are you trying to do?".

Cheers,

Dave

On Dec 5, 2009, at 6:59 PM, Chunk 1978 wrote:

> i have an method that takes a CGPoint as an argument.  i would like to
> call the method without supplying a CGPoint, but i can't pass nil or
> null.  i can pass CGPointZero, but that is still a point: {0, 0}

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