I have this algorithm exercise that splits an array into smaller parts. This is working right, but I did not understand the operation. Could someone explain this to me in more detail. Please.
const letters = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']
function chunk(array, size) {
const chunked = [];
for (let element of array) {
const last = chunked[chunked.length - 1]
if (!last || last.length === size) {
chunked.push([element])
} else {
last.push(element)
}
}
return chunked;
}
console.log(chunk(letters, 2))
It returns:
['a','b']
['c'.'d']
['e']
This parameter that in this case is the number 2, which is passed in the function, is the number of items that each array contains.
console.log(chunk(letters, 2))
I didn't understand the fact that it generated 2 arrays 'chunked' and 'last' and in the end only return 'chunked'. But I did not understand the link between the 2 arrays: 'chunked' and 'last'