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In the Lodash library, can someone provide a better explanation of merge and extend / assign.

Its a simple question but the answer evades me nonetheless.

5 Answers 5

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Here's how extend/assign works: For each property in source, copy its value as-is to destination. if property values themselves are objects, there is no recursive traversal of their properties. Entire object would be taken from source and set in to destination.

Here's how merge works: For each property in source, check if that property is object itself. If it is then go down recursively and try to map child object properties from source to destination. So essentially we merge object hierarchy from source to destination. While for extend/assign, it's simple one level copy of properties from source to destination.

Here's simple JSBin that would make this crystal clear: http://jsbin.com/uXaqIMa/2/edit?js,console

Here's more elaborate version that includes array in the example as well: http://jsbin.com/uXaqIMa/1/edit?js,console

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    An important difference seems to be that while _.merge returns a new merged object, _.extend mutates the destination object in-place,
    – letronje
    Commented Feb 13, 2015 at 9:31
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    They both appear to mutate the destination object regardless of what they return.
    – Jason Rice
    Commented Feb 13, 2015 at 22:55
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    It also appears that _.extend clobbers members of the destination object if they are not present in the source object, which is suprising to me.
    – Jason Rice
    Commented Feb 13, 2015 at 22:58
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    @JasonRice They don't get clobbered. For example in this fiddle, the "a" property doesn't get clobbered. It is true that after the extend, dest["p"]["y"] no longer exists -- This is because before the extend src and dest both had a "p" property, so dest's "p" property gets completely overwritten by src's "p" property (they are the exact same object now). Commented Jun 17, 2015 at 23:38
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    To be clear, both methods modify/overwrite the first argument by reference. So if you want a new object from the resulting merge, best to pass an object literal. var combined = merge({}, src, dest)
    – Jon Jaques
    Commented Jan 19, 2016 at 21:29
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Lodash version 3.10.1

Methods compared

  • _.merge(object, [sources], [customizer], [thisArg])
  • _.assign(object, [sources], [customizer], [thisArg])
  • _.extend(object, [sources], [customizer], [thisArg])
  • _.defaults(object, [sources])
  • _.defaultsDeep(object, [sources])

Similarities

  • None of them work on arrays as you might expect
  • _.extend is an alias for _.assign, so they are identical
  • All of them seem to modify the target object (first argument)
  • All of them handle null the same

Differences

  • _.defaults and _.defaultsDeep processes the arguments in reverse order compared to the others (though the first argument is still the target object)
  • _.merge and _.defaultsDeep will merge child objects and the others will overwrite at the root level
  • Only _.assign and _.extend will overwrite a value with undefined

Tests

They all handle members at the root in similar ways.

_.assign      ({}, { a: 'a' }, { a: 'bb' }) // => { a: "bb" }
_.merge       ({}, { a: 'a' }, { a: 'bb' }) // => { a: "bb" }
_.defaults    ({}, { a: 'a' }, { a: 'bb' }) // => { a: "a"  }
_.defaultsDeep({}, { a: 'a' }, { a: 'bb' }) // => { a: "a"  }

_.assign handles undefined but the others will skip it

_.assign      ({}, { a: 'a'  }, { a: undefined }) // => { a: undefined }
_.merge       ({}, { a: 'a'  }, { a: undefined }) // => { a: "a" }
_.defaults    ({}, { a: undefined }, { a: 'bb' }) // => { a: "bb" }
_.defaultsDeep({}, { a: undefined }, { a: 'bb' }) // => { a: "bb" }

They all handle null the same

_.assign      ({}, { a: 'a'  }, { a: null }) // => { a: null }
_.merge       ({}, { a: 'a'  }, { a: null }) // => { a: null }
_.defaults    ({}, { a: null }, { a: 'bb' }) // => { a: null }
_.defaultsDeep({}, { a: null }, { a: 'bb' }) // => { a: null }

But only _.merge and _.defaultsDeep will merge child objects

_.assign      ({}, {a:{a:'a'}}, {a:{b:'bb'}}) // => { "a": { "b": "bb" }}
_.merge       ({}, {a:{a:'a'}}, {a:{b:'bb'}}) // => { "a": { "a": "a", "b": "bb" }}
_.defaults    ({}, {a:{a:'a'}}, {a:{b:'bb'}}) // => { "a": { "a": "a" }}
_.defaultsDeep({}, {a:{a:'a'}}, {a:{b:'bb'}}) // => { "a": { "a": "a", "b": "bb" }}

And none of them will merge arrays it seems

_.assign      ({}, {a:['a']}, {a:['bb']}) // => { "a": [ "bb" ] }
_.merge       ({}, {a:['a']}, {a:['bb']}) // => { "a": [ "bb" ] }
_.defaults    ({}, {a:['a']}, {a:['bb']}) // => { "a": [ "a"  ] }
_.defaultsDeep({}, {a:['a']}, {a:['bb']}) // => { "a": [ "a"  ] }

All modify the target object

a={a:'a'}; _.assign      (a, {b:'bb'}); // a => { a: "a", b: "bb" }
a={a:'a'}; _.merge       (a, {b:'bb'}); // a => { a: "a", b: "bb" }
a={a:'a'}; _.defaults    (a, {b:'bb'}); // a => { a: "a", b: "bb" }
a={a:'a'}; _.defaultsDeep(a, {b:'bb'}); // a => { a: "a", b: "bb" }

None really work as expected on arrays

Note: As @Mistic pointed out, Lodash treats arrays as objects where the keys are the index into the array.

_.assign      ([], ['a'], ['bb']) // => [ "bb" ]
_.merge       ([], ['a'], ['bb']) // => [ "bb" ]
_.defaults    ([], ['a'], ['bb']) // => [ "a"  ]
_.defaultsDeep([], ['a'], ['bb']) // => [ "a"  ]

_.assign      ([], ['a','b'], ['bb']) // => [ "bb", "b" ]
_.merge       ([], ['a','b'], ['bb']) // => [ "bb", "b" ]
_.defaults    ([], ['a','b'], ['bb']) // => [ "a", "b"  ]
_.defaultsDeep([], ['a','b'], ['bb']) // => [ "a", "b"  ]
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    It actually merge arrays exactly like it merge objects, because arrays are objects with numeric keys. I agree that one would expect to concatenate, or replace arrays, depends on usage.
    – Mistic
    Commented Oct 21, 2015 at 19:22
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    Excellent answer. The tests were very didactic :-) Commented Oct 25, 2015 at 23:27
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    _.extend is an alias for _.assign, so they are identical conflicts with Only _.assign will overwrite a value with undefined
    – Chazt3n
    Commented Apr 25, 2016 at 19:51
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    As of v4.0, _.extend is now an alias for _.assignIn, not _assign. The assignIn function adds dealing with inherited properties. Commented May 6, 2016 at 6:55
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    is null treated the same as undifined here?
    – C_B
    Commented Feb 6, 2017 at 12:54
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Another difference to pay attention to is handling of undefined values:

mergeInto = { a: 1}
toMerge = {a : undefined, b:undefined}
lodash.extend({}, mergeInto, toMerge) // => {a: undefined, b:undefined}
lodash.merge({}, mergeInto, toMerge)  // => {a: 1, b:undefined}

So merge will not merge undefined values into defined values.

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    Is it just me or does that make lodash.extend completely useless in that it always returns a clone of the 'toMerge' object?
    – Jason Rice
    Commented Feb 13, 2015 at 23:07
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    If mergeInto had properties that toMerge didn't have then it would retain those properties. In that case it wouldn't be a clone. Commented Feb 18, 2015 at 12:11
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    @JasonRice remove the empty {} and it will merge it in place lodash.merge(mergeInto, toMerge) Commented May 15, 2015 at 11:15
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It might be also helpful to consider what they do from a semantic point of view:

_.assign

   will assign the values of the properties of its second parameter and so on,
   as properties with the same name of the first parameter. (shallow copy & override)

_.merge

   merge is like assign but does not assign objects but replicates them instead.
  (deep copy)

_.defaults

   provides default values for missing values.
   so will assign only values for keys that do not exist yet in the source.

_.defaultsDeep

   works like _defaults but like merge will not simply copy objects
   and will use recursion instead.

I believe that learning to think of those methods from the semantic point of view would let you better "guess" what would be the behavior for all the different scenarios of existing and non existing values.

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If you want a deep copy without override while retaining the same obj reference

obj = _.assign(obj, _.merge(obj, [source]))

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