This content originally appeared on DEV Community 👩💻👨💻 and was authored by Steve Sewell
Did you know, there's now a native way in JavaScript to do deep copies of objects?
That's right, this structuredClone
function is built into the JavaScript runtime:
const calendarEvent = {
title: "Builder.io Conf",
date: new Date(123),
attendees: ["Steve"]
}
// 😍
const copied = structuredClone(calendarEvent)
Did you notice in the example above we not only copied the object, but also the nested array, and even the Date object?
And all works precisely as expected:
copied.attendees // ["Steve"]
copied.date // Date: Wed Dec 31 1969 16:00:00
cocalendarEvent.attendees === copied.attendees // false
That’s right, structuredClone
can not only do the above, but additionally:
- Clone infinitely nested objects and arrays
- Clone circular references
- Clone any transferrable objects, such as
Date
,Set
,Map
,Error
,RegExp
,ArrayBuffer
,Blob
,File
,ImageData
, and several more
So for example, this madness would even work as expected:
const kitchenSink = {
set: new Set([1, 3, 3]),
map: new Map([[1, 2]]),
regex: /foo/,
deep: { array: [ new File(someBlobData, 'file.txt') ] },
error: new Error('Hello!')
}
kitchenSink.circular = kitchenSink
// ✅ All good, fully and deeply copied!
const clonedSink = structuredClone(kitchenSink)
Why not just object spread?
It is important to note we are talking about a deep copy. If you just need to do a shallow copy, aka a copy that does not copy nested objects or arrays, then we can just do an object spread:
const simpleEvent = {
title: "Builder.io Conf",
}
// ✅ no problem, there are no nested objects or arrays
const shallowCopy = {...calendarEvent}
Or even one of these, if you prefer
const shallowCopy = Object.assign({}, simpleEvent)
const shallowCopy = Object.create(simpleEvent)
But as soon as we have nested items, we run into trouble:
const calendarEvent = {
title: "Builder.io Conf",
date: new Date(123),
attendees: ["Steve"]
}
const shallowCopy = {...calendarEvent}
// 🚩 oops - we just added "Bob" to both the copy *and* the original event
shallowCopy.attendees.push("Bob")
// 🚩 oops - we just updated the date for the copy *and* original event
shallowCopy.date.setTime(456)
As you can see, we did not make a full copy of this object.
The nested date and array are still a shared reference between both, which can cause us major issues if we want to edit those thinking we are only updating the copied calendar event object.
Why not JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(x))
?
Ah yes, this trick. It is actually a great one, and is surprisingly performant, but has some shortcomings that structuredClone
addresses.
Take this as an example:
const calendarEvent = {
title: "Builder.io Conf",
date: new Date(123),
attendees: ["Steve"]
}
// 🚩 JSON.stringify converted the `date` to a string
const problematicCopy = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(calendarEvent))
If we log problematicCopy
, we would get:
{
title: "Builder.io Conf",
date: "1970-01-01T00:00:00.123Z"
attendees: ["Steve"]
}
That’s not what we wanted! date
is supposed to be a Date
object, not a string.
This happened because JSON.stringify
can only handle basic objects, arrays, and primitives. Any other type can be handled in hard to predict ways. For instance, Dates are converted to a string. But a Set
is simply converted to {}
.
JSON.stringify
even completely ignores certain things, like undefined
or functions.
For instance, if we copied our kitchenSink
example with this method:
const kitchenSink = {
set: new Set([1, 3, 3]),
map: new Map([[1, 2]]),
regex: /foo/,
deep: { array: [ new File(someBlobData, 'file.txt') ] },
error: new Error('Hello!')
}
const veryProblematicCopy = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(kitchenSink))
We would get:
{
"set": {},
"map": {},
"regex": {},
"deep": {
"array": [
{}
]
},
"error": {},
}
Ew!
Oh yeah, and we had to remove the circular reference we originally had for this, as JSON.stringify
simply throws errors if it encounters one of those.
So while this method can be great if our requirements fit what it can do, there is a lot that we can do with structuredClone
(aka everything above that we failed to do here) that this method cannot.
Why not _.cloneDeep
?
To date, Lodash’s cloneDeep
function has been a very common solution to this problem.
And this does, in fact, work as expected:
import cloneDeep from 'lodash/cloneDeep'
const calendarEvent = {
title: "Builder.io Conf",
date: new Date(123),
attendees: ["Steve"]
}
// ✅ All good!
const clonedSink = structuredClone(kitchenSink)
But, there is just one caveat here. According to the Import Cost extension in my IDE, that prints the kb cost of anything I import, this one function comes in at a whole 17.4kb minified (5.3kb gzipped):
And that assumes you import just that function. If you instead import the more common way, not realizing that tree shaking doesn’t always work the way you hoped, you could accidentally import up to 25kb just for this one function 😱
While that will not be the end of the world to anyone, it’s simply not necessary in our case, not when browsers already have structuredClone
built in.
Browser and runtime support
And here is the best part - cloneDeep
is supported in all major browsers, and even Node.js and Deno:
Source: MDN
Conclusion
It’s been a long time coming, but we finally now have structuredClone
to make deep cloning objects in JavaScript a breeze. Thank you, Surma.
About me
Hi! I'm Steve, CEO of Builder.io.
We make a way to drag + drop with your components to create pages and other CMS content on your site or app, visually.
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This content originally appeared on DEV Community 👩💻👨💻 and was authored by Steve Sewell
Steve Sewell | Sciencx (2023-01-18T15:03:53+00:00) Deep Cloning Objects in JavaScript, the Modern Way. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2023/01/18/deep-cloning-objects-in-javascript-the-modern-way/
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