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  • License MIT

A library for deep (recursive) merging of Javascript objects

Package Exports

  • deepmerge
  • deepmerge/dist/umd
  • deepmerge/dist/umd.js

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (deepmerge) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

deepmerge

~554B gzipped, ~1.10KiB minified

Merge the enumerable attributes of two objects deeply.

example

var x = {
    foo: { bar: 3 },
    array: [{
        does: 'work',
        too: [ 1, 2, 3 ]
    }]
}

var y = {
    foo: { baz: 4 },
    quux: 5,
    array: [{
        does: 'work',
        too: [ 4, 5, 6 ]
    }, {
        really: 'yes'
    }]
}

var expected = {
    foo: {
        bar: 3,
        baz: 4
    },
    array: [{
        does: 'work',
        too: [ 1, 2, 3 ]
    }, {
        does: 'work',
        too: [ 4, 5, 6 ]
    }, {
        really: 'yes'
    }],
    quux: 5
}

merge(x, y) // => expected

methods

var merge = require('deepmerge')

merge(x, y, [options])

Merge two objects x and y deeply, returning a new merged object with the elements from both x and y.

If an element at the same key is present for both x and y, the value from y will appear in the result.

Merging creates a new object, so that neither x or y are be modified.

merge.all(arrayOfObjects, [options])

Merges any number of objects into a single result object.

var x = { foo: { bar: 3 } }
var y = { foo: { baz: 4 } }
var z = { bar: 'yay!' }

var expected = { foo: { bar: 3, baz: 4 }, bar: 'yay!' }

merge.all([x, y, z]) // => expected

options

arrayMerge

The merge will also concatenate arrays and merge array values by default.

However, there are nigh-infinite valid ways to merge arrays, and you may want to supply your own. You can do this by passing an arrayMerge function as an option.

function overwriteMerge(destinationArray, sourceArray, options) {
    return sourceArray
}
merge(
    [1, 2, 3],
    [3, 2, 1],
    { arrayMerge: overwriteMerge }
) // => [3, 2, 1]

To prevent arrays from being merged:

const dontMerge = (destination, source) => source
const output = merge({ coolThing: [1,2,3] }, { coolThing: ['a', 'b', 'c'] }, { arrayMerge: dontMerge })
output // => { coolThing: ['a', 'b', 'c'] }

To use the old (pre-version-2.0.0) array merging algorithm, pass in this function:

function oldArrayMerge(target, source, optionsArgument) {
    var destination = target.slice()
    source.forEach(function(e, i) {
        if (typeof destination[i] === 'undefined') {
            destination[i] = cloneIfNecessary(e, optionsArgument)
        } else if (isMergeableObject(e)) {
            destination[i] = deepmerge(target[i], e, optionsArgument)
        } else if (target.indexOf(e) === -1) {
            destination.push(cloneIfNecessary(e, optionsArgument))
        }
    })
    return destination
}

clone

Deprecated.

Defaults to true.

If clone is false then child objects will be copied directly instead of being cloned. This was the default behavior before version 2.x.

install

With npm do:

npm install deepmerge

Just want to download the file without using any package managers/bundlers? Download the UMD version from unpkg.com.

test

With npm do:

npm test

license

MIT