Clone an object based on a template
. What do you do if you don't want an exact copy, but you do want the robustness of some kind of reliable clone operation but you only want bits cloned or you want to make sure you can control the existence or format of each attribute value cloned?
I am contributing this because it's useful for us and we created it because we could not find something similar. You can use it to clone an object based on a template
object which specifies what attributes of the object I want to clone, and the template allows for functions to transform those attributes into something different if they don't exist on the source object or however you want to handle the clone. If it's not useful I am sure someone can delete this answer.
function isFunction(functionToCheck) {
var getType = {};
return functionToCheck && getType.toString.call(functionToCheck) === '[object Function]';
}
function cloneObjectByTemplate(obj, tpl, cloneConstructor) {
if (typeof cloneConstructor === "undefined") {
cloneConstructor = false;
}
if (obj == null || typeof (obj) != 'object') return obj;
//if we have an array, work through it's contents and apply the template to each item...
if (Array.isArray(obj)) {
var ret = [];
for (var i = 0; i < obj.length; i++) {
ret.push(cloneObjectByTemplate(obj[i], tpl, cloneConstructor));
}
return ret;
}
//otherwise we have an object...
//var temp:any = {}; // obj.constructor(); // we can't call obj.constructor because typescript defines this, so if we are dealing with a typescript object it might reset values.
var temp = cloneConstructor ? new obj.constructor() : {};
for (var key in tpl) {
//if we are provided with a function to determine the value of this property, call it...
if (isFunction(tpl[key])) {
temp[key] = tpl[key](obj); //assign the result of the function call, passing in the value
} else {
//if our object has this property...
if (obj[key] != undefined) {
if (Array.isArray(obj[key])) {
temp[key] = [];
for (var i = 0; i < obj[key].length; i++) {
temp[key].push(cloneObjectByTemplate(obj[key][i], tpl[key], cloneConstructor));
}
} else {
temp[key] = cloneObjectByTemplate(obj[key], tpl[key], cloneConstructor);
}
}
}
}
return temp;
}
A simple way to call it would be like this:
var source = {
a: "whatever",
b: {
x: "yeah",
y: "haha"
}
};
var template = {
a: true, //we want to clone "a"
b: {
x: true //we want to clone "b.x" too
}
};
var destination = cloneObjectByTemplate(source, template);
If you wanted to use a function to make sure an attribute is returned or to make sure it's a particular type, use a template like this. Instead of using { ID: true }
we are providing a function which still just copies the ID attribute
of the source object but it makes sure that it's a number even if it does not exist on the source object.
var template = {
ID: function (srcObj) {
if(srcObj.ID == undefined){ return -1; }
return parseInt(srcObj.ID.toString());
}
}
Arrays will clone fine but if you want to you can have your own function handle those individual attributes too, and do something special like this:
var template = {
tags: function (srcObj) {
var tags = [];
if (process.tags != undefined) {
for (var i = 0; i < process.tags.length; i++) {
tags.push(cloneObjectByTemplate(
srcObj.tags[i],
{ a : true, b : true } //another template for each item in the array
);
}
}
return tags;
}
}
So in the above, our template just copies the tags
attribute of the source object if it exists, (it's assumed to be an array), and for each element in that array the clone function is called to individually clone it based on a second template which just copies the a
and b
attributes of each of those tag elements.
If you are taking objects in and out of node and you want to control which attributes of those objects are cloned then this is a great way of controlling that in node.js
and the code works in the browser too.
Here is an example of it's use: http://jsfiddle.net/hjchyLt1/
mObj=JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(jsonObject));
Object.create(o)
, it does everything the author asks?var x = { deep: { key: 1 } }; var y = Object.create(x); x.deep.key = 2;
After doing this,y.deep.key
will also be 2, hence Object.create CAN NOT BE USED for cloning...