Keys will only be applies the the first level, you must go down a level.
let x = { "1": { "id": 1 }, "2": { "id": 1, "key": "value" } }
let y = { "2": { "id": 2 } }
let z = { ...x, ...y } // outer
for (let k in z) z[k] = { ...x[k], ...y[k] } // inner
console.log(z)
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<!-- Expected
{
"1": {
"id": 1
},
"2": {
"id": 2,
"key": "value"
}
}
-->
A more robust approach
I borrowed Lewis' example for deep-merging multiple objects and converted it to a plugin.
// Based on: https://stackoverflow.com/a/55736757/1762224
const ObjectUtils = (() => {
const { keys, freeze } = Object // sym-links
let __isObject, __merge, __coalesceByKey, __deepMerge // fwd declaration
__isObject = a => typeof a === "object" && !Array.isArray(a)
__merge = (a, b) =>
__isObject(a) && __isObject(b)
? __deepMerge(a, b)
: __isObject(a) && !__isObject(b)
? a : b
__coalesceByKey = src => (acc, key) =>
(acc[key] && src[key]
? (acc[key] = __merge(acc[key], src[key]))
: (acc[key] = src[key])) && acc
__deepMerge = (target, ...sources) =>
sources.reduce(
(acc, src) => keys(src).reduce(__coalesceByKey(src), acc), target
)
return freeze({ isObject : __isObject, deepMerge : __deepMerge })
})()
let x = { "1": { "id": 1 }, "2": { "id": 1, "key": "value" } }
let y = { "2": { "id": 2 } }
console.log(ObjectUtils.deepMerge({}, x, y));
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