Merge
Merge and extend objects.
Usage
var merge = require( '@stdlib/utils/merge' );
merge( target, source1[, source2[,...,sourceN]] )
Merges and extends a target object
.
var target = {
'a': 'beep'
};
var source = {
'a': 'boop',
'b': 'bap'
};
var out = merge( target, source );
/* returns
{
'a': 'boop',
'b': 'bap'
}
*/
The function supports merging multiple source objects
.
var target = {
'a': 'beep'
};
var source1 = {
'b': 'boop'
};
var source2 = {
'c': 'cat'
};
var out = merge( target, source1, source2 );
/* returns
{
'a': 'beep',
'b': 'boop',
'c': 'cat'
}
*/
merge.factory( options )
Returns a custom merge function
for merging and extending objects
.
var opts = {
'level': 100,
'copy': true,
'override': true,
'extend': true
};
var m = merge.factory( opts );
The function accepts the following options
:
- level: limits the merge depth. The default merge strategy is a deep (recursive) merge. Default:
+infinity
. - copy:
boolean
indicating whether to deep copy merged values. Deep copying prevents shared references and sourceobject
mutation. Default:true
. - override: defines the merge strategy. If
true
, sourceobject
values will always override targetobject
values. Iffalse
, source values never override target values (useful for adding, but not overwriting, properties). To define a custom merge strategy, provide afunction
. Default:true
. - extend:
boolean
indicating whether new properties can be added to the targetobject
. Iffalse
, only shared properties are merged. Default:true
.
The default merge is a deep (recursive) merge.
var m = merge.factory( {} );
var target = {
'a': {
'b': {
'c': 5
},
'd': 'beep'
}
};
var source = {
'a': {
'b': {
'c': 10
}
}
};
var out = m( target, source );
/* returns
{
'a': {
'b': {
'c': 10
},
'd': 'beep'
}
}
*/
To limit the merge depth, set the level
option.
var m = merge.factory({
'level': 2
});
var target = {
'1': {
'a': 'beep',
'2': {
'3': null,
'b': [ 5, 6, 7 ]
}
}
};
var source = {
'1': {
'b': 'boop',
'2': {
'3': [ 1, 2, 3 ]
}
}
};
var out = m( target, source );
/* returns
{
'1': {
'a': 'beep',
'b': 'boop',
'2': {
'3': [ 1, 2, 3 ]
}
}
}
*/
By default, merged values are deep copied.
var m = merge.factory( {} );
var target = {
'a': null
};
var source = {
'a': {
'b': [ 1, 2, 3 ]
}
};
var out = m( target, source );
console.log( out.a.b === source.a.b );
// => false
To allow shared references, set the copy
option to false
.
var m = merge.factory({
'copy': false
});
var target = {};
var source = {
'a': [ 1, 2, 3 ]
};
var out = m( target, source );
var bool = ( out.a === source.a );
// returns true
To prevent existing properties from being overridden, set the override
option to false
.
var m = merge.factory({
'override': false
});
var target = {
'a': 'beep',
'b': 'boop'
};
var source = {
'a': null,
'c': 'bop'
};
var out = m( target, source );
/* returns
{
'a': 'beep',
'b': 'boop',
'c': 'bop'
}
*/
Alternatively, to define a custom merge strategy, set the override
option to a function
.
function strategy( a, b, key ) {
/* Parameters:
a => target value
b => source value
key => object key
*/
if ( key === 'a' ) {
return b;
}
if ( key === 'b' ) {
return a;
}
return 'bebop';
}
var m = merge.factory({
'override': strategy
});
var target = {
'a': 'beep',
'b': 'boop',
'c': 1234
};
var source = {
'a': null,
'b': {},
'c': 'bop'
};
var out = m( target, source );
/* returns
{
'a': null,
'b': 'boop',
'c': 'bebop'
}
*/
To prevent non-existent properties from being added to the target object
, set the extend
option to false
.
var m = merge.factory({
'extend': false
});
var target = {
'a': 'beep',
'b': 'boop'
};
var source = {
'b': 'hello',
'c': 'world'
};
var out = m( target, source );
/* returns
{
'a': 'beep',
'b': 'hello'
}
*/
Notes
The target
object
is mutated.var target = { 'a': 'beep' }; var source = { 'b': 'boop' }; var out = merge( target, source ); console.log( out === target ); // => true console.log( target.b ); // => 'boop'
To return a new
object
, provide an emptyobject
as the first argument.var target = { 'a': 'beep' }; var source = { 'b': 'boop' }; var out = merge( {}, target, source ); console.log( out === target ); // => false
Only plain JavaScript
objects
are merged and extended. The following values/types are either deep copied or assigned:Boolean
String
Number
Date
RegExp
Array
Int8Array
Uint8Array
Uint8ClampedArray
Init16Array
Uint16Array
Int32Array
Uint32Array
Float32Array
Float64Array
Buffer
(Node.js)Set
Map
Error
URIError
ReferenceError
SyntaxError
RangeError
Support for deep merging class instances is inherently fragile.
Number
,String
, orBoolean
objects are merged as primitives.Functions are not deep copied.
Examples
var merge = require( '@stdlib/utils/merge' );
var target = {
'a': 'beep',
'b': 'boop',
'c': {
'c1': 'woot',
'c2': false,
'c3': {
'c3a': [ 1, 2 ],
'c3b': null
}
},
'd': [ 1, 2, 3 ]
};
var source = {
'b': 3.141592653589793,
'c': {
'c1': 'bap',
'c3': {
'c3b': 5,
'c3c': 'bop'
},
'c4': 1337,
'c5': new Date()
},
'd': [ 4, 5, 6 ],
'e': true
};
var out = merge( {}, target, source );
/* returns
{
'a': 'beep',
'b': 3.141592653589793,
'c': {
'c1': 'bap',
'c2': false,
'c3': {
'c3a': [ 1, 2 ],
'c3b': 5,
'c3c': 'bop'
},
'c4': 1337,
'c5': <Date>
},
'd': [ 4, 5, 6 ],
'e': true
}
*/