-
Javascript is always pass by value, but when a variable refers to an object (including arrays), the "value" is a reference to the object.
-
Changing the value of a variable never changes the underlying primitive or object, it just points the variable to a new primitive or object.
-
However, changing a property of an object referenced by a variable does change the underlying object.
When you use extend, you will encounter the above problem. safe-extend has deep copy all the parameters, so it avoids this problem.
Thanks to ljharb and justmoon.
Notes: safe-extend are based entirely on extend. This is just a syntactic sugar.
npm install safe-extend
var target = {a:1}
var obj = {b:2}
safeExtend(true, target, obj)
// equal
extend(
true,
extend(true, {}, target),
extend(true, {}, obj)
)
safeExtend.clone(target) // deep copy
// equal
var emptyData = Array.isArray(target)? []: {}
extend(true, emptyData, target)
extend
is a port of the classic extend() method from jQuery. It behaves as you expect. It is simple, tried and true.
Notes:
- Since Node.js >= 4,
Object.assign
now offers the same functionality natively (but without the "deep copy" option). See ECMAScript 2015 (ES6) in Node.js. - Some native implementations of
Object.assign
in both Node.js and many browsers (since NPM modules are for the browser too) may not be fully spec-compliant. Checkobject.assign
module for a compliant candidate.
npm install safe-extend
Syntax: extend ( [deep
], target
, object1
, [objectN
] )
Extend one object with one or more others, returning the modified object.
Example:
var extend = require('safe-extend');
extend(targetObject, object1, object2);
Keep in mind that the target object will be modified, and will be returned from extend().
If a boolean true is specified as the first argument, extend performs a deep copy, recursively copying any objects it finds. Otherwise, the copy will share structure with the original object(s).
Undefined properties are not copied. However, properties inherited from the object's prototype will be copied over.
Warning: passing false
as the first argument is not supported.
deep
Boolean (optional) If set, the merge becomes recursive (i.e. deep copy).target
Object The object to extend.object1
Object The object that will be merged into the first.objectN
Object (Optional) More objects to merge into the first.
extend
is licensed under the MIT License.
safe-extend
is licensed under the MIT License
All credit to the jQuery authors for perfecting this amazing utility.
Ported to Node.js by [Stefan Thomas][github-justmoon] with contributions by [Jonathan Buchanan][github-insin] and [Jordan Harband][github-ljharb].