Example 1: string split
const str = 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.';
console.log(str.split(''));
console.log(str.split(' '));
console.log(str.split('ox'));
> Array ["T", "h", "e", " ", "q", "u", "i", "c", "k", " ", "b", "r", "o", "w", "n", " ", "f", "o", "x", " ", "j", "u", "m", "p", "s", " ", "o", "v", "e", "r", " ", "t", "h", "e", " ", "l", "a", "z", "y", " ", "d", "o", "g", "."]
> Array ["The", "quick", "brown", "fox", "jumps", "over", "the", "lazy", "dog."]
> Array ["The quick brown f", " jumps over the lazy dog."]
Example 2: javascript split regex
str.split(separator/*, limit*/)
/*Syntax explanation -----------------------------
Returns an array of strings seperated at every
point where the 'separator' (string or regex) occurs.
The 'limit' is an optional non-sub-zero integer.
If provided, the string will split every time the
separator occurs until the array 'limit' has been reached.
*/
//Example -----------------------------------------
const str = 'I need some help with my code bro.';
const words = str.split(' ');
console.log(words[6]);
//Output: "code"
const chars = str.split('');
console.log(chars[9]);
//Output: "m"
const limitedChars = str.split('',10);
console.log(limitedChars);
//Output: Array ["I", " ", "n", "e", "e", "d", " ", "s", "o", "m"]
const strCopy = str.split();
console.log(strCopy);
//Output: Array ["I need some help with my code bro."]