There's a huge difference between the two, with very serious consequences. The most upvoted questions do not even touch this, and the information about object spread being a proposal is not relevant in 2022 anymore.
The difference is that Object.assign
changes the object in-place, while the spread operator (...
) creates a brand new object, and this will break object reference equality.
First, let's see the effect, and then I'll give a real-world example of how important it is to understand this fundamental difference.
First, let's use Object.assign:
// Let's create a new object, that contains a child object;
const parentObject = { childObject: { hello: 'world '} };
// Let's get a reference to the child object;
const childObject = parentObject.childObject;
// Let's change the child object using Object.assign, adding a new `foo` key with `bar` value;
Object.assign(parentObject.childObject, { foo: 'bar' });
// childObject is still the same object in memory, it was changed IN PLACE.
parentObject.childObject === childObject
// true
Now the same exercise with the spread operator:
// Let's create a new object, that contains a child object;
const parentObject = { childObject: { hello: 'world '} };
// Let's get a reference to the child object;
const childObject = parentObject.childObject;
// Let's change the child object using the spread operator;
parentObject.childObject = {
...parentObject.childObject,
foo: 'bar',
}
// They are not the same object in memory anymore!
parentObject.childObject === childObject;
// false
It's easy to see what is going on, because on the parentObject.childObject = {...}
we are cleary assigning the value of the childObject
key in parentObject
to a brand new object literal, and the fact it's being composed by the old childObject
content's is irrelevant. It's a new object.
And if you assume this is irrelevant in practice, let me show a real world scenario of how important it is to understand this.
In a very large Vue.js application, we started noticing a lot of sluggishness when typing the name of the customer in an input field.
After a lot of debugging, we found out that each char typed in that input triggered a hole bunch of computed
properties to re-evaluate.
This wasn't anticipated, since the customer's name wasn't used at all in those computeds functions. Only other customer data (like age, sex) was being used. What was goin on? Why was vue re-evaluating all those computed functions when the customer's name changed?
Well, we had a Vuex store that did this:
mutations: {
setCustomer(state, payload) {
// payload being { name: 'Bob' }
state.customer = { ...state.customer, ...payload };
}
And our computed were like this:
veryExpensiveComputed() {
const customerAge = this.$store.state.customer.age;
}
So, voilá! When the customer name changed, the Vuex mutation was actually changing it to a new object entirely; and since the computed relied on that object to get the customer age, Vue counted on that very specific object instance as a dependency, and when it was changed to a new object (failing the ===
object equality test), Vue decided it was time to re-run the computed function.
The fix? Use Object.assign to not discard the previous object, but to change it in place ...
mutations: {
setCustomer(state, payload) {
// payload being same as above: { name: 'Bob' }
Object.assign(state.customer, payload);
}
BTW, if you are in Vue2, you shouldn't use Object.assign because Vue 2 can't track those object changes directly, but the same logic applies, just using Vue.set instead of Object.assign:
mutations: {
setCustomer(state, payload) {
Object.keys(payload).forEach(key => {
Vue.set(state.customer, key, payload[key])
})
}