
Security News
Deno 2.4 Brings Back deno bundle, Improves Dependency Management and Observability
Deno 2.4 brings back bundling, improves dependency updates and telemetry, and makes the runtime more practical for real-world JavaScript projects.
deep-match2
Advanced tools
deepMatch(object, matcher)
All properties and nested objects mentioned in the matcher
are required to be
present in object
.
Library is version of deep-match. Difference:
options = { arrayOrderMatters: true }
to force that during comparison order of items in object
and matcher
should be the same.// two objects that look exactly the same
deepMatch({ a: 1, b: 2 } }, { a: 1, b: 2 }); // true
// additional properties on the left-hand side are ignored
deepMatch({ a: 1, b: 2 } }, { a: 1 }); // true
// everything on the right-hand side is required
deepMatch({ a: 1 } }, { a: 1, b: 2 }); // false
// same for arrays
deepMatch([1, 2, 3], [1, 2]); // true
deepMatch([1, 2, 3], [3, 4]); // false
Regular expressions and functions in the matcher
are run against the corresponding values in the object
:
deepMatch('aaa', /a+/); // true
deepMatch('bbb', /a+/); // false
deepMatch(['aaa', 'bbb'], [/a+/]); // true
deepMatch(['aaa', 'bbb'], [/a+/, /b+/]); // true
deepMatch(['aaa', 'ccc'], [/a+/, /b+/]); // false
deepMatch([1, 2, 3], [v => v === 1]); // true
When matching arrays order of items do not matters by default. To change it you can use additional parameter:
let opts = { arrayOrderMatters: true };
deepMatch([1, 2], [1, 2], opts); // true
deepMatch([1, 2], [2, 1], opts); // false
deepMatch([1, 2], [ 2], opts); // false
// disable checks for undefined items
// [,2] is the same as [undefined, 2]
deepMatch([1, 2], [ , 2], opts); // true
// arrayOrderMatters applies also to nested arrays:
source = { a1: [ {i1: []}, {i2: [1, 2, [31, 32, 33], 4, 5]} ]};
matcher = { a1: [ {i1: []}, {i2: [1, undefined, [32, 33 ], , 5]} ]};
deepMatch(source, matcher, opts); // false
deepMatch(source, matcher); // false
// Note that in case of arrayOrderMatters=false undefined is not skipped
source = { a1: [ {i1: []}, {i2: [1, 2, [31, 32, 33], 4, 5]} ]};
matcher = { a1: [ {i1: []}, {i2: [1, undefined, [31, undefined, 33], , 5]} ]};
deepMatch(source, matcher, opts); // true
deepMatch(source, matcher); // false
Values are compared according to the following rules:
matcher
match (note different behavior for option arrayOrderMatters
).arrayOrderMatters=true
value of undefined
matchers are skipped.arrayOrderMatters=false
(default behavior) value of undefined
matchers are NOT skipped.matcher
match.MIT
FAQs
Check if two values deeply match (optionally with arrayOrderMatters)
The npm package deep-match2 receives a total of 946 weekly downloads. As such, deep-match2 popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that deep-match2 demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Deno 2.4 brings back bundling, improves dependency updates and telemetry, and makes the runtime more practical for real-world JavaScript projects.
Security News
CVEForecast.org uses machine learning to project a record-breaking surge in vulnerability disclosures in 2025.
Security News
Browserslist-rs now uses static data to reduce binary size by over 1MB, improving memory use and performance for Rust-based frontend tools.