Let's say you want to merge the properties of two JavaScript objects:
let a = { foo: 1, bar: 2 }
let b = { bar: 3, baz: 4 }
let merged = merge(a, b) // => { foo: 1, bar: 3, baz: 4 }
Depending on your build, there are several ways to implement merge()
.
When you have ES6
When you have an ES6 transpiler or don't support IE11, you may use the spread operator (...
) to expand both objects into a new object literal:
let merged = { ...a, ...b }
When you have Unpoly Show archive.org snapshot
let merged = up.util.merge(a, b)
When you only have ES5
let merged = Object.assign({}, a, b)
Note for Lodash users
Lodash has
_.merge()
Show archive.org snapshot
, but that merges arrays and objects recursively. Make sure this is what you want.
Posted by Henning Koch to makandra dev (2020-07-08 12:33)