593

...where each object also has references to other objects within the same array?

When I first came up with this problem I just thought of something like

var clonedNodesArray = nodesArray.clone()

would exist and searched for information on how to clone objects in JavaScript. I did find a question on Stack Overflow (answered by the very same @JohnResig) and he pointed out that with jQuery you could do

var clonedNodesArray = jQuery.extend({}, nodesArray);

to clone an object. I tried this though, and this only copies the references of the objects in the array. So if I

nodesArray[0].value = "red"
clonedNodesArray[0].value = "green"

the value of both nodesArray[0] and clonedNodesArray[0] will turn out to be "green". Then I tried

var clonedNodesArray = jQuery.extend(true, {}, nodesArray);

which deep copies an Object, but I got "too much recursion" and "control stack overflow" messages from both Firebug and Opera Dragonfly respectively.

How would you do it? Is this something that shouldn't even be done? Is there a reusable way of doing this in JavaScript?

1

40 Answers 40

742

Creating a deep copy with structuredClone

The modern way to deep copy an array in JavaScript is to use structuredClone:

array2 = structuredClone(array1);

However, this function is relatively new (Chrome 98, Firefox 94) and is currently only available to about 85% of users, so it's not ready for production yet without a polyfill.

As an alternative, you can use one of the well-supported JSON-based solutions below.

Creating a deep copy with JSON.parse

A general solution, that accounts for all possible objects inside an Array of objects may not be possible. That said, if your array contains objects that have JSON-serializable content (no functions, no Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY, etc.) one simple way to avoid loops, at a performance cost, is this pure vanilla one-line solution.

let clonedArray = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(nodesArray))

To summarize the comments below, the primary advantage of this approach is that it also clones the contents of the array, not just the array itself. The primary downsides are its limit of only working on JSON-serializable content, and it's performance is ~30 times slower than the spread method.

If you have shallow objects in the array, and IE6 is acceptable, a better approach is to use the spread operator combined with the .map array operator. For a two levels deep situation (like the array in the Appendix below):

clonedArray = nodesArray.map(a => {return {...a}})

The reasons are two fold: 1) It is much, much faster (see below for a benchmark comparison) and it will also allow any valid object in your array.

*Appendix: The performance quantification is based on cloning this array of objects a million times:

 [{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic1.jpg?raw=true', id: '1', isFavorite: false}, {url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic2.jpg?raw=true', id: '2', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic3.jpg?raw=true', id: '3', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic4.jpg?raw=true', id: '4', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic5.jpg?raw=true', id: '5', isFavorite: true},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic6.jpg?raw=true', id: '6', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic7.jpg?raw=true', id: '7', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic8.jpg?raw=true', id: '8', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic9.jpg?raw=true', id: '9', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic10.jpg?raw=true', id: '10', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic11.jpg?raw=true', id: '11', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic12.jpg?raw=true', id: '12', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic13.jpg?raw=true', id: '13', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic14.jpg?raw=true', id: '14', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic15.jpg?raw=true', id: '15', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic16.jpg?raw=true', id: '16', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic17.jpg?raw=true', id: '17', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic18.jpg?raw=true', id: '18', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic19.jpg?raw=true', id: '19', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic20.jpg?raw=true', id: '20', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic21.jpg?raw=true', id: '21', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic22.jpg?raw=true', id: '22', isFavorite: false},{url: 'https://github.com/bobziroll/scrimba-react-bootcamp-images/blob/master/pic23.jpg?raw=true', id: '23', isFavorite: false}]

either using:

let clonedArray = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(nodesArray))

or:

clonedArray = nodesArray.map(a => {return {...a}})

The map/spread approach took 0.000466 ms per pass and the JSON.parse and JSON.stringify 0.014771 ms per pass.*

14
  • 143
    This might work for JSON data, but if your array contains any functions or instances of objects that have methods, say goodbye to them. Oct 23, 2014 at 1:43
  • 13
    be careful if you have an array which contains the value Infinity. This value gets lost (is null afterwards). (jsfiddle.net/klickagent/ehm4bd3s) Feb 1, 2015 at 16:16
  • 15
    This is just generally a bad approach unless your array contains only primitives, and/or objects which themselves contain only string/number/boolean primitives (even null and undefined will be problems, since JSON doesn't support them). Further, it's a vastly less efficient operation than old_array.slice(0);, which should work both better and faster.
    – XML
    Sep 7, 2015 at 9:38
  • 2
    if object of array has DateTime, then string will be returned instead of DateTime! new Date !== JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(new Date)) Jan 15, 2016 at 7:41
  • 5
    The key line in the OP's question, which this answer above ignores entirely: ...where each object also has references to other objects within the same array?
    – XML
    Mar 14, 2017 at 4:35
386

I solved cloning of an array of objects with Object.assign

const newArray = myArray.map(a => Object.assign({}, a));

or even shorter with spread syntax

const newArray = myArray.map(a => ({...a}));
13
  • 23
    But if myArray contained a bunch of Dinosaurs, newArray contains a bunch of Objects. That's lame, don't you agree? Mar 27, 2017 at 20:09
  • 4
    best approach, as it keeps objects functions alive, rathen then losing them with JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(nodesArray))
    – scipper
    Sep 8, 2017 at 13:30
  • 24
    @MatthewJamesDavis you can solve this by replacing {} with new Dinosaur().
    – Agargara
    Jun 6, 2018 at 8:32
  • 11
    shallow copy not deep copy Feb 13, 2019 at 19:11
  • 7
    This works great for an array of objects, if those objects only contain primitive properties... which is what i needed, thanks
    – mojave
    Feb 19, 2019 at 20:55
162

If all you need is a shallow copy, a really easy way is:

new_array = old_array.slice(0);
6
  • 7
    I don't think you have to pass 0, you can just call .slice() at least in chrome anyway
    – slf
    Apr 23, 2013 at 17:51
  • 133
    This doesn't actually work though, does it? I mean, it's not an answer to the question how to clone an array of objects. This is the solution to clone a simple array.
    – bozdoz
    Dec 30, 2013 at 23:17
  • 43
    Actually this won't work for an objects array. The returned array by slice will be a new array but will contain the references to the original array objects.
    – S. A.
    Mar 7, 2014 at 21:51
  • 4
    This will work only for "generics" int, string etc. but not for an array of objects. Nov 19, 2014 at 17:09
  • 8
    for array of objects this doesn't actually clone, update to the new_array will also update the old_array .
    – Anas
    Mar 30, 2016 at 15:28
122

The issue with your shallow copy is that all the objects aren't cloned. While the references to each object are unique in each array, once you ultimately grab onto it you're dealing with the same object as before. There is nothing wrong with the way you cloned it... the same result would occur using Array.slice().

The reason your deep copy is having problems is because you're ending up with circular object references. Deep will go as deep as it can go, and if you've got a circle, it'll keep going infinitely until the browser faints.

If the data structure cannot be represented as a directed acyclic graph, then I'm not sure you're going to be able to find an all-purpose method for deep cloning. Cyclic graphs provide many tricky corner cases, and since it's not a common operation I doubt anyone has written a full solution (if it's even possible - it might not be! But I have no time to try to write a rigorous proof now.). I found some good comments on the issue on this page.

If you need a deep copy of an Array of Objects with circular references I believe you're going to have to code your own method to handle your specialized data structure, such that it is a multi-pass clone:

  1. On round one, make a clone of all objects that don't reference other objects in the array. Keep a track of each object's origins.
  2. On round two, link the objects together.
1
75

If you only need a shallow clone, the best way to do this clone is as follows:

Using the ... ES6 spread operator.

Here's the simplest example:

var clonedObjArray = [...oldObjArray];

This way we spread the array into individual values and put it in a new array with the [] operator.

Here's a longer example that shows the different ways it works:

let objArray = [ {a:1} , {b:2} ];

let refArray = objArray; // this will just point to the objArray
let clonedArray = [...objArray]; // will clone the array

console.log( "before:" );
console.log( "obj array" , objArray );
console.log( "ref array" , refArray );
console.log( "cloned array" , clonedArray );

objArray[0] = {c:3};

console.log( "after:" );
console.log( "obj array" , objArray ); // [ {c:3} , {b:2} ]
console.log( "ref array" , refArray ); // [ {c:3} , {b:2} ]
console.log( "cloned array" , clonedArray ); // [ {a:1} , {b:2} ]

11
  • 2
    Good modern answer, that won't work with older browsers (like IE 11)
    – Jealie
    Feb 20, 2017 at 20:00
  • 1
    @Jealie I'm going to guess KingpinEX is targeting this answer for folks transpiling es6 to something more universally useful with Babel or what have you.
    – ruffin
    Apr 6, 2017 at 21:21
  • 92
    This just deep copies the array, not each object in the array. Jul 18, 2017 at 8:52
  • 46
    To follow up on what @ToivoSäwén said, this will not deep copy the objects in the array. It will still reference the original objects so if you mutate them, it will impact the original array as well. Nov 16, 2017 at 23:39
  • 4
    It works for primitives only. Try this: objArray[0].a = 3; and you will see the object's reference remains the same in clonedArray. Jul 11, 2018 at 21:49
28

This works for me:

var clonedArray = $.map(originalArray, function (obj) {
                      return $.extend({}, obj);
                  });

And if you need a deep copy of objects in the array:

var clonedArray = $.map(originalArray, function (obj) {
                      return $.extend(true, {}, obj);
                  });
1
  • 2
    This looks like it would work. I'm trying to avoid extensive jQuery use, so I won't use it in my situation, but a for loop and for...in would work.
    – bozdoz
    Dec 30, 2013 at 23:24
18
$.evalJSON($.toJSON(origArray));
5
  • 2
    You will need to be using the jquery json plugin to use this code.google.com/p/jquery-json
    – wmitchell
    Aug 4, 2011 at 15:00
  • 36
    Without JQ (fine in modern browsers): JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(origArray));
    – forresto
    May 27, 2013 at 12:10
  • I found this comment useful. In my implementation I needed to make a copy of an array of objects that had KnockoutJS observable properties applied. The copy only needed the values, not the observable-ness. To make a copy of JUST the values I used JSON.parse(ko.toJSON(origArray)) OR ko.utils.parseJson(ko.toJSON(origArray)). Just my 2 cents and thank you for helping me arrive at my solution.
    – wavedrop
    Aug 23, 2013 at 15:29
  • 7
    JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(origArray)); is definitely the simplest solution.
    – yorkw
    Sep 23, 2013 at 21:43
  • jQuery is often unnecessary. youmightnotneedjquery.com
    – ADJenks
    Nov 26, 2019 at 22:05
18

If you want to implement a deep clone, use JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(your {} or [])):

const myObj ={
    a: 1,
    b: 2,
    b: 3
}

const deepClone = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(myObj));
deepClone.a = 12;
console.log("deepClone-----"+myObj.a);
const withOutDeepClone = myObj;
withOutDeepClone.a = 12;
console.log("withOutDeepClone----" + myObj.a);

1
  • 2021 and still using this, especially for react
    – darren z
    Oct 22, 2021 at 21:07
12

Map will create a new array from the old one (without reference to old one) and inside the map you create a new object and iterate over properties (keys) and assign values from the old Array object to corresponding properties to the new object.

This will create exactly the same array of objects.

let newArray = oldArray.map(a => {
               let newObject = {};
               Object.keys(a).forEach(propertyKey => {
                    newObject[propertyKey] = a[propertyKey];
               });
               return newObject;
});
0
11

Lodash has the cloneDeep function for these purposes:

var objects = [{ 'a': 1 }, { 'b': 2 }];
var deep = _.cloneDeep(objects);
9

I may have a simple way to do this without having to do painful recursion and not knowing all the finer details of the object in question. Using jQuery, simply convert your object to JSON using the jQuery $.toJSON(myObjectArray), then take your JSON string and evaluate it back to an object. BAM! Done, and done! Problem solved. :)

var oldObjArray = [{ Something: 'blah', Cool: true }];
var newObjArray = eval($.toJSON(oldObjArray));
5
  • 24
    Some modern browsers have the JSON method built-in so you can do this: JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(MY_ARRAY)) which should be faster. Good suggestion.
    – Nicolas R
    Jun 18, 2010 at 14:07
  • 1
    And if they don't use json2, not eval.
    – kamranicus
    Jan 9, 2012 at 18:02
  • This has terrible performance, but unfortunately is the best answer I've seen :/
    – Dvid Silva
    Jun 25, 2014 at 20:13
  • Don't eval anything with user data. Preferably never use eval() at all. It's a security risk.
    – ADJenks
    Nov 26, 2019 at 22:06
  • Won't this fail if the array's object structure has circular references? Which I am under the impression that it does...? Apr 2, 2021 at 6:05
9

I'm answering this question because there doesn't seem to be a simple and explicit solution to the problem of "cloning an array of objects in JavaScript":

function deepCopy (arr) {
    var out = [];
    for (var i = 0, len = arr.length; i < len; i++) {
        var item = arr[i];
        var obj = {};
        for (var k in item) {
            obj[k] = item[k];
        }
        out.push(obj);
    }
    return out;
}

// test case

var original = [
    {'a' : 1},
    {'b' : 2}
    ];

var copy = deepCopy(original);

// change value in copy
copy[0]['a'] = 'not 1';

// original[0]['a'] still equals 1

This solution iterates the array values, iterates the object keys, saving the latter to a new object, and pushes that new object to a new array.

See jsfiddle. Note: a simple .slice() or [].concat() isn't enough for the objects within the array.

3
  • thanks for the answer, but you should've highlighted the shortcomings of the answer. It doesn't work when the objects have objects in it.. right?
    – Harsh
    Mar 19, 2017 at 5:38
  • it will create shallow copy. not deep Feb 13, 2019 at 19:07
  • you need to add recursion somewhere
    – DGoiko
    Apr 7, 2019 at 12:50
9

This method is very simple and you can modify your clone without modifying the original array.

// Original Array
let array = [{name: 'Rafael'}, {name: 'Matheus'}];

// Cloning Array
let clone = array.map(a => {return {...a}})

// Editing the cloned array
clone[1].name = 'Carlos';


console.log('array', array)
// [{name: 'Rafael'}, {name: 'Matheus'}]

console.log('clone', clone)
// [{name: 'Rafael'}, {name: 'Carlos'}]

2
  • 2
    This does a shallow copy that's two levels deep, whereas [...oldArray] and oldArray.slice(0) do a shallow copy one level deep. So this is super useful, but not an actual full deep clone. Jul 17, 2019 at 18:02
  • 1
    true deep clone can be done using lodash.clonedeep from npm
    – revelt
    Jan 27, 2020 at 19:55
5

As Daniel Lew mentioned, cyclic graphs have some problems. If I had this problem I'd either add special clone() methods to the problematic objects or remember which objects I've already copied.

I'd do it with a variable copyCount which increases by 1 every time you copy in your code. An object that has a lower copyCount than the current copy-process is copied. If not, the copy, that exists already, should be referenced. This makes it necessary to link from the original to its copy.

There is still one problem: Memory. If you have this reference from one object to the other, it's likely that the browser can't free those objects, as they are always referenced from somewhere. You'd have to make a second pass where you set all copy-references to Null. (If you do this, you'd not have to have a copyCount but a boolean isCopied would be enough, as you can reset the value in the second pass.)

5

jQuery extend is working fine. You just need to specify that you are cloning an array rather than an object (note the [] instead of {} as parameter to the extend method):

var clonedNodesArray = jQuery.extend([], nodesArray);
2
  • 2
    Hmm, if you downvote this, can you please add a comment about why you do so? Or can you first try the code and see if it works or not? Thanks ;)
    – Stef
    Mar 16, 2016 at 4:35
  • 1
    After changing an object in first array, the object in second array gets modified, so it's not ok.
    – Spikolynn
    Oct 25, 2017 at 7:42
4

My approach:

var temp = { arr : originalArray };
var obj = $.extend(true, {}, temp);
return obj.arr;

gives me a nice, clean, deep clone of the original array - with none of the objects referenced back to the original :-)

3
  • This is the best solution using jquery. short and sweet. Oct 18, 2016 at 14:22
  • 2
    I did a performance test and this solution seems to be roughly 2x faster than the JSON.stringify solution.
    – meehocz
    Oct 2, 2017 at 13:04
  • Why is it working better than the other 15 previous answers? Aug 6, 2021 at 20:17
4

I use the new ECMAScript 6 Object.assign method:

let oldObject = [1, 3, 5, "test"];
let newObject = Object.assign({}, oldObject);

The first argument of this method is the array to be updated. We pass an empty object, because we want to have a new object.

We can also use this syntax, which is the same but shorter:

let newObject = [...oldObject];
1
  • 1
    Note that these approaches will only copy references for arrays and objects within the array, and won't make new copies of these. Expect this to break for multidimensional structures. Jul 17, 2019 at 17:53
3

I was pretty frustrated by this problem. Apparently the problem arises when you send in a generic Array to the $.extend method. So, to fix it, I added a little check, and it works perfectly with generic arrays, jQuery arrays, and any objects.

jQuery.extend({
    deepclone: function(objThing) {
        // return jQuery.extend(true, {}, objThing);
        /// Fix for arrays, without this, arrays passed in are returned as OBJECTS! WTF?!?!
        if ( jQuery.isArray(objThing) ) {
            return jQuery.makeArray( jQuery.deepclone($(objThing)) );
        }
        return jQuery.extend(true, {}, objThing);
    },
});

Invoke using:

var arrNewArrayClone = jQuery.deepclone(arrOriginalArray);
// Or more simply/commonly
var arrNewArrayClone = $.deepclone(arrOriginalArray);
2
  • deepclone? I use jquery-1.9.1 and it doesnot support this method. Is it method of more modern version? Oct 1, 2014 at 5:30
  • @user2783091 he is extending JQuery to add that function. Its not something that comes out of the box
    – JorgeeFG
    Oct 13, 2014 at 16:33
3

This deeply copies arrays, objects, null and other scalar values, and also deeply copies any properties on non-native functions (which is pretty uncommon but possible). (For efficiency, we do not attempt to copy non-numeric properties on arrays.)

function deepClone (item) {
  if (Array.isArray(item)) {
    var newArr = [];
    for (var i = item.length; i-- > 0;) {
      newArr[i] = deepClone(item[i]);
    }
    return newArr;
  }
  if (typeof item === 'function' && !(/\(\) \{ \[native/).test(item.toString())) {
    var obj;
    eval('obj = '+ item.toString());
    for (var k in item) {
      obj[k] = deepClone(item[k]);
    }
    return obj;
  }
  if (item && typeof item === 'object') {
    var obj = {};
    for (var k in item) {
      obj[k] = deepClone(item[k]);
    }
    return obj;
  }
  return item;
}
3

Array.slice can be used to copy an array or part of an array...

This would work with strings and numbers .. - changing a string in one array would not affect the other - but objects are still just copied by reference, so changes to referenced objects in one array would have an affect on the other array.

Here is an example of a JavaScript undo manager that could be useful for this: http://www.ridgway.co.za/archive/2007/11/07/simple-javascript-undo-manager-for-dtos.aspx

6
  • I know. The reason I wanted to implement this is because I'm trying to resolve a CSP problem with backtracking. I thought that one of the ways of implementing backtracking could be like "taking snapshots" the state of the assignment of the variables by... cloning such snapshots into a stack.
    – wallyqs
    Feb 28, 2009 at 7:32
  • ...and well, it might actually be a very bad idea.
    – wallyqs
    Feb 28, 2009 at 7:33
  • That approach could have other synchronization complications :).. How do you know the array is not being changed while you are taking a snapshot?
    – markt
    Feb 28, 2009 at 7:38
  • Added a link to an article where the author implemented a simple undo manager using javascript..
    – markt
    Feb 28, 2009 at 7:46
  • Both links are broken: "404 - File or directory not found." and "It looks like nothing was found at this location. Maybe try a search?", respectively. Aug 6, 2021 at 19:58
3

Forget eval() (it is the most misused feature of JavaScript and makes the code slow) and slice(0) (works for simple data types only)

This is the best solution for me:

Object.prototype.clone = function() {
  var myObj = (this instanceof Array) ? [] : {};
  for (i in this) {
    if (i != 'clone') {
        if (this[i] && typeof this[i] == "object") {
          myObj[i] = this[i].clone();
        }
        else
          myObj[i] = this[i];
    }
  }
  return myObj;
};
3

In JavaScript, array and object copy change the original values, so a deep copy is the solution for this.

A deep copy means actually creating a new array and copying over the values, since whatever happens to it will never affect the origin one.

JSON.parse and JSON.stringify is the best and simple way to deep copy. The JSON.stringify() method converts a JavaScript value to a JSON string.The JSON.parse() method parses a JSON string, constructing the JavaScript value or object described by the string.

Deep Clone

let a = [{ x:{z:1} , y: 2}];
let b = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(a));
b[0].x.z=0

console.log(JSON.stringify(a)); //[{"x":{"z":1},"y":2}]
console.log(JSON.stringify(b)); // [{"x":{"z":0},"y":2}]

For more details: Read Here

0
3

In 2022, We can use structuredClone to deep copy.

structuredClone(array)

For more details about it click here

1
  • 1
    That is amazing! I guess I can mark this question as answered now
    – wallyqs
    Jun 23, 2022 at 20:25
2

We can invent a simple recursive Array method to clone multidimensional arrays. While the objects within the nested arrays keep their reference to the corresponding objects in the source array, arrays won't.

Array.prototype.clone = function(){
  return this.map(e => Array.isArray(e) ? e.clone() : e);
};

var arr = [ 1, 2, 3, 4, [ 1, 2, [ 1, 2, 3 ], 4 , 5], 6 ],
    brr = arr.clone();
brr[4][2][1] = "two";
console.log(JSON.stringify(arr));
console.log(JSON.stringify(brr));

2

With jQuery:

var target = [];
$.each(source, function() {target.push($.extend({}, this));});
0
2

I am using Vue.js, so arrays/objects have other code tacked-on for Vue.js functionality. I tried many of the answers given, but I ended up using clone-deep.

1
person1 = {
    name: 'Naved',
    last: 'Khan',
    clothes: {
        jens: 5,
        shirts: 10
    }
};

person2 = {
    name: 'Naved',
    last: 'Khan'
};

// first way  shallow copy single lavel copy 
// const person3 = { ...person1 };

// secound way shallow copy single lavel copy
// const person3 = Object.assign({}, person1);

// third  way shallow copy single lavel copy but old 
// const person3 = {};
// for (let key in person1) {
//  person3[key] = person1[key];
// }

// deep copy with array and object best way
const person3 = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(person1));

    person3.clothes.jens = 20;

console.log(person1);
console.log(person2);
console.log(person3);
1

The following code will perform a deep copy of objects and arrays recursively:

function deepCopy(obj) {
    if (Object.prototype.toString.call(obj) === '[object Array]') {
        var out = [], i = 0, len = obj.length;
        for ( ; i < len; i++ ) {
            out[i] = arguments.callee(obj[i]);
        }
        return out;
    }
    if (typeof obj === 'object') {
        var out = {}, i;
        for ( i in obj ) {
            out[i] = arguments.callee(obj[i]);
        }
        return out;
    }
    return obj;
}

Source

1
  • arguments.callee is not available in strict mode and has performance problems otherwise. Oct 3, 2016 at 22:09
1

Some elegant ways for deep cloning in JavaScript:

 

  1. A vanilla JavaScript method for cloning objects

  2. A clever exploit of the JSON library to deep-clone objects

  3. Using jQuery’s $.extend() function

  4. Using Mootoolsclone() function to clone objects

0
1

Here is a my solution. It works for an array of objects or Map. This solution keeps the methods also.

A deep copy means actually creating a new array and copying over the values, since whatever happens to it will never affect the origin one.

This is the best solution for me:

deepCopy(inputObj: any) {
    var newObj = inputObj;
    if (inputObj && typeof inputObj === "object") {
        newObj = Object.prototype.toString.call(inputObj) === "[object Array]" ? [] : {};
        for (var i in inputObj) {
            newObj[i] = this.deepCopy(inputObj[i]);
        }

        //For maps
        if(Object.prototype.toString.call(inputObj) === "[object Map]"){
            newObj = new Map;
            inputObj.forEach((v,k) =>{
                newObj.set(k,this.deepCopy(v));
            });
        }
    }
    return newObj;
}

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