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265 lines
5.5 KiB
265 lines
5.5 KiB
# deepmerge
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Merges the enumerable properties of two or more objects deeply.
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> UMD bundle is 723B minified+gzipped
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## Getting Started
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### Example Usage
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<!--js
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const merge = require('./')
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-->
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```js
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const x = {
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foo: { bar: 3 },
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array: [{
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does: 'work',
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too: [ 1, 2, 3 ]
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}]
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}
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const y = {
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foo: { baz: 4 },
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quux: 5,
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array: [{
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does: 'work',
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too: [ 4, 5, 6 ]
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}, {
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really: 'yes'
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}]
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}
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const output = {
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foo: {
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bar: 3,
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baz: 4
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},
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array: [{
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does: 'work',
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too: [ 1, 2, 3 ]
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}, {
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does: 'work',
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too: [ 4, 5, 6 ]
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}, {
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really: 'yes'
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}],
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quux: 5
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}
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merge(x, y) // => output
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```
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### Installation
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With [npm](http://npmjs.org) do:
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```sh
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npm install deepmerge
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```
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deepmerge can be used directly in the browser without the use of package managers/bundlers as well: [UMD version from unpkg.com](https://unpkg.com/deepmerge/dist/umd.js).
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### Include
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deepmerge exposes a CommonJS entry point:
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```
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const merge = require('deepmerge')
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```
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The ESM entry point was dropped due to a [Webpack bug](https://github.com/webpack/webpack/issues/6584).
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# API
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## `merge(x, y, [options])`
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Merge two objects `x` and `y` deeply, returning a new merged object with the
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elements from both `x` and `y`.
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If an element at the same key is present for both `x` and `y`, the value from
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`y` will appear in the result.
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Merging creates a new object, so that neither `x` or `y` is modified.
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**Note:** By default, arrays are merged by concatenating them.
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## `merge.all(arrayOfObjects, [options])`
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Merges any number of objects into a single result object.
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```js
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const foobar = { foo: { bar: 3 } }
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const foobaz = { foo: { baz: 4 } }
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const bar = { bar: 'yay!' }
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merge.all([ foobar, foobaz, bar ]) // => { foo: { bar: 3, baz: 4 }, bar: 'yay!' }
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```
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## Options
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### `arrayMerge`
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There are multiple ways to merge two arrays, below are a few examples but you can also create your own custom function.
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Your `arrayMerge` function will be called with three arguments: a `target` array, the `source` array, and an `options` object with these properties:
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- `isMergeableObject(value)`
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- `cloneUnlessOtherwiseSpecified(value, options)`
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#### `arrayMerge` example: overwrite target array
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Overwrites the existing array values completely rather than concatenating them:
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```js
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const overwriteMerge = (destinationArray, sourceArray, options) => sourceArray
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merge(
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[1, 2, 3],
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[3, 2, 1],
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{ arrayMerge: overwriteMerge }
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) // => [3, 2, 1]
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```
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#### `arrayMerge` example: combine arrays
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Combines objects at the same index in the two arrays.
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This was the default array merging algorithm pre-version-2.0.0.
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```js
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const combineMerge = (target, source, options) => {
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const destination = target.slice()
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source.forEach((item, index) => {
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if (typeof destination[index] === 'undefined') {
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destination[index] = options.cloneUnlessOtherwiseSpecified(item, options)
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} else if (options.isMergeableObject(item)) {
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destination[index] = merge(target[index], item, options)
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} else if (target.indexOf(item) === -1) {
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destination.push(item)
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}
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})
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return destination
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}
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merge(
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[{ a: true }],
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[{ b: true }, 'ah yup'],
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{ arrayMerge: combineMerge }
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) // => [{ a: true, b: true }, 'ah yup']
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```
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### `isMergeableObject`
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By default, deepmerge clones every property from almost every kind of object.
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You may not want this, if your objects are of special types, and you want to copy the whole object instead of just copying its properties.
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You can accomplish this by passing in a function for the `isMergeableObject` option.
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If you only want to clone properties of plain objects, and ignore all "special" kinds of instantiated objects, you probably want to drop in [`is-plain-object`](https://github.com/jonschlinkert/is-plain-object).
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```js
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const { isPlainObject } = require('is-plain-object')
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function SuperSpecial() {
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this.special = 'oh yeah man totally'
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}
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const instantiatedSpecialObject = new SuperSpecial()
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const target = {
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someProperty: {
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cool: 'oh for sure'
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}
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}
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const source = {
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someProperty: instantiatedSpecialObject
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}
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const defaultOutput = merge(target, source)
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defaultOutput.someProperty.cool // => 'oh for sure'
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defaultOutput.someProperty.special // => 'oh yeah man totally'
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defaultOutput.someProperty instanceof SuperSpecial // => false
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const customMergeOutput = merge(target, source, {
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isMergeableObject: isPlainObject
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})
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customMergeOutput.someProperty.cool // => undefined
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customMergeOutput.someProperty.special // => 'oh yeah man totally'
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customMergeOutput.someProperty instanceof SuperSpecial // => true
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```
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### `customMerge`
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Specifies a function which can be used to override the default merge behavior for a property, based on the property name.
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The `customMerge` function will be passed the key for each property, and should return the function which should be used to merge the values for that property.
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It may also return undefined, in which case the default merge behaviour will be used.
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```js
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const alex = {
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name: {
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first: 'Alex',
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last: 'Alexson'
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},
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pets: ['Cat', 'Parrot']
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}
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const tony = {
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name: {
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first: 'Tony',
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last: 'Tonison'
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},
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pets: ['Dog']
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}
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const mergeNames = (nameA, nameB) => `${nameA.first} and ${nameB.first}`
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const options = {
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customMerge: (key) => {
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if (key === 'name') {
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return mergeNames
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}
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}
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}
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const result = merge(alex, tony, options)
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result.name // => 'Alex and Tony'
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result.pets // => ['Cat', 'Parrot', 'Dog']
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```
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### `clone`
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*Deprecated.*
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Defaults to `true`.
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If `clone` is `false` then child objects will be copied directly instead of being cloned. This was the default behavior before version 2.x.
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# Testing
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With [npm](http://npmjs.org) do:
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```sh
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npm test
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```
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# License
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MIT
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