For the longest time, you had to resort to workarounds and libraries to create a deep copy of a JavaScript value.
Copying a value in JavaScript is almost always shallow, as opposed to deep. That means that changes to deeply nested values will be visible in the copy as well as the original.
One way to create a shallow copy in JavaScript using the object spread operator...:
const myOriginal = {
someProp: "with a string value",
anotherProp: {
withAnotherProp: 1,
andAnotherProp: true
}
};
const myShallowCopy = {...myOriginal};
Adding or changing a property directly on the shallow copy will only affect the copy, not the original:
myShallowCopy.aNewProp = "a new value";
console.log(myOriginal.aNewProp)
// ^ logs `undefined`
However, adding or changing a deeply nested property affects both the copy and the original:
myShallowCopy.anotherProp.aNewProp = "a new value";
console.log(myOriginal.anotherProp.aNewProp)
// ^ logs `a new value`
The expression {...myOriginal}
iterates over the (enumerable) properties of myOriginal
using the Spread Operator. It uses the property name and value, and assigns them one by one to a freshly created, empty object. As such, the resulting object is identical in shape, but with its own copy of the list of properties and values. The values are copied, too, but so-called primitive values are handled differently by the JavaScript value than non-primitive values. To quote MDN:
In JavaScript, a primitive (primitive value, primitive data type) is data that is not an object and has no methods. There are seven primitive data types: string, number, bigint, boolean, undefined, symbol, and null.
MDN — Primitive
Non-primitive values are handled as references, meaning that the act of copying the value is really just copying a reference to the same underlying object, resulting in the shallow copy behavior.
That's it for now. Next article I will write about Deep copies
in JavaScript.
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