Really? Apart from the assumption that the objects in the array are strings, it's needlessly inefficient.
It's could be done with: myArray = @[ [myArray objectAtIndex:0] ];
@snksnk This works even for NSArray, because even though you can't change an NSArray object once it has been created, pointers to NSArray objects are mutable so you can create a new array and assign it to the same reference, although the address it points to will be different.
I'm also using array literals because I like using modern notation. It's just syntactic sugar for: