.pop() function.
.pop() is used to "pop" a value off of the end of an array. We can store this "popped off" value by assigning it to a variable. In other words, .pop() removes the last element from an array and returns that element.
Any type of entry can be "popped" off of an array - numbers, strings, even nested arrays.
var threeArr = [1, 4, 6];
var oneDown = threeArr.pop();
console.log(oneDown); // Returns 6
console.log(threeArr); // Returns [1, 4]
.pop() function to remove the last item from myArray, assigning the "popped off" value to removedFromMyArray.
myArray should only contain [["John", 23]].'
testString: 'assert((function(d){if(d[0][0] == "John" && d[0][1] === 23 && d[1] == undefined){return true;}else{return false;}})(myArray), "myArray should only contain [["John", 23]].");'
- text: Use pop() on myArray
testString: 'assert(/removedFromMyArray\s*=\s*myArray\s*.\s*pop\s*(\s*)/.test(code), "Use pop() on myArray");'
- text: 'removedFromMyArray should only contain ["cat", 2].'
testString: 'assert((function(d){if(d[0] == "cat" && d[1] === 2 && d[2] == undefined){return true;}else{return false;}})(removedFromMyArray), "removedFromMyArray should only contain ["cat", 2].");'
```