The slice method returns a new array with a copied slice from the original array.
Syntax:
arr.slice([start[, end]])
start
refers Zero-based index. If start
is undefined, slice
starts from the index 0.
In end
, slice extracts up to but not including end.
Its too theoretically right ๐, lets understand by few examples.
Using two arguments โ :
const arr = ['๐', '๐', '๐ฝ', '๐', '๐'];
const newArr = arr.slice(2,4);
console.log(newArr); // ["๐ฝ", "๐"]
Without arguments, you get a copy of the full array โ
const arr = ['๐', '๐', '๐ฝ', '๐', '๐'];
const newArr = arr.slice();
console.log(newArr); // ["๐", "๐", "๐ฝ", "๐", "๐"]
Using one argument, you get a copy from the specified index to the end of the array โ
const arr = ['๐', '๐', '๐ฝ', '๐', '๐'];
const newArr = arr.slice(3);
console.log(newArr); // ["๐", "๐"]
Index can also be negative, in which case the starting index is calculated from the end โ
const arr = ['๐', '๐', '๐ฝ', '๐', '๐'];
const newArr = arr.slice(2,-2);
console.log(newArr); // ["๐ฝ"]
If start
is greater than the index range of the sequence, an empty array is returned โ
const arr = ['๐', '๐', '๐ฝ', '๐', '๐'];
const newArr = arr.slice(6);
console.log(newArr); // []
If end
is greater than the length of the sequence, slice extracts through to the end of the sequence โ
const arr = ['๐', '๐', '๐ฝ', '๐', '๐'];
const newArr = arr.slice(1,9);
console.log(newArr); // ["๐", "๐ฝ", "๐", "๐"]
slice() method can also be used for strings โ
const arr = 'suprabha';
const newArr = arr.slice(0,3);
console.log(newArr); // "sup"
Note: ๐งจ
Slice is immutable and Splice mutates the array.
Reference ๐ง
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