51

Question says it all really. I want to copy an observable array to another in KnockoutJS.

4 Answers 4

63

To clone an observableArray you would want to do:

var viewModel = {
    array1: ko.observableArray(["one", "two"]),
    array2: ko.observableArray()
};

viewModel.clone = function() {
   viewModel.array1(viewModel.array2.slice(0));
};

If you want to just do a copy, then you would do:

viewModel.array1(viewModel.array2());

The problem with the second example is that the underlying array is the same, so pushing to array1 or array2 would result in both having the new value (as they both point to the same array).

2
  • 2
    Yes I only want a value copy of the array rather than a reference copy so the first option should be the best fit for my scenario, thanks.
    – jaffa
    Jun 29, 2011 at 8:37
  • 9
    In my experience, this seems to copy by reference if your observable arrays are full of observable properties because the observables themselves are objects. Slice copies objects by reference. Do you know how to deeply clone knockout arrays?
    – PrinceTyke
    Aug 15, 2016 at 18:37
48

I was faced with the same task; to clone an observable array. The only way I could figure out how to do it, is to convert the observable to an JS object, then convert that object to an observable object. The following function requires KnockoutJS mapping plugin: http://knockoutjs.com/documentation/plugins-mapping.html

function cloneObservable(observableObject) {
    return ko.mapping.fromJS(ko.toJS(observableObject));
}

Hope this helps

8
  • 8
    Be careful, this messes up with ko.computed(), stores just value, you have to redefine computed after clone.
    – Anri
    May 6, 2013 at 16:21
  • @Anri - Thank you for posting your comment... it saved me hours!! Garry - please update answer with this!
    – Kevin
    Aug 16, 2013 at 13:16
  • 5
    If you don't want to use the knockoutJS mapping plugin, another option is to convert your object to JSON an create a new using the parsed json data. Since I didn't want to include the mapping plugin as I only need it here I did: self.myObservable(new koModel(JSON.parse(ko.toJSON(oldObservable))))
    – Gigi2m02
    Oct 15, 2013 at 15:51
  • 2
    @Anri and it also messes up with __ko_mappings__ property if you do the mapping back and forth. Don't forget to ignore this property when you remap previously toJS-em object.
    – SOReader
    Mar 23, 2014 at 17:50
  • 1
    use ko.mapping.fromJS(ko.mapping.toJS(observableObject)); to prevent the ko_mappings causing problem on edit of the pushed cloned object later on. Had the same problem and using the mapping.toJS solved it. Jul 11, 2014 at 19:41
2

Assuming you have something like:

modelA { someValues: observableArray(); }
modelB { iWantYourValues: observableArray(); }

You should be able to:

modelB.iWantYourValues(modelA.someValues())
0

Not exactly what you're asking, but I'd like to add this for posterity...

If you want to clone an observable that stays in sync with the original (most often to create a throttled/debounced clone while maintaining the original), you can do something as such:

const clone = ko.pureComputed(() => original()).extend({ rateLimit: 500 })

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