splice method for this, which takes arguments for the index of where to start removing items, then the number of items to remove. If the second argument is not provided, the default is to remove items through the end. However, the splice method mutates the original array it is called on. Here's an example:
var cities = ["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad", "London", "Berlin"];As we saw in the last challenge, the
cities.splice(3, 1); // Returns "London" and deletes it from the cities array
// cities is now ["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad", "Berlin"]
slice method does not mutate the original array, but returns a new one which can be saved into a variable. Recall that the slice method takes two arguments for the indices to begin and end the slice (the end is non-inclusive), and returns those items in a new array. Using the slice method instead of splice helps to avoid any array-mutating side effects.
nonMutatingSplice by using slice instead of splice. It should limit the provided cities array to a length of 3, and return a new array with only the first three items.
Do not mutate the original array provided to the function.
slice method.
testString: assert(code.match(/\.slice/g), 'Your code should use the slice method.');
- text: Your code should not use the splice method.
testString: assert(!code.match(/\.splice/g), 'Your code should not use the splice method.');
- text: The inputCities array should not change.
testString: assert(JSON.stringify(inputCities) === JSON.stringify(["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad", "London", "Berlin"]), 'The inputCities array should not change.');
- text: nonMutatingSplice(["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad", "London", "Berlin"]) should return ["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad"].
testString: assert(JSON.stringify(nonMutatingSplice(["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad", "London", "Berlin"])) === JSON.stringify(["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad"]), 'nonMutatingSplice(["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad", "London", "Berlin"]) should return ["Chicago", "Delhi", "Islamabad"].');
```