fast-copy
A blazing fast deep object copier
Table of contents
Usage
import copy from 'fast-copy';
import { deepEqual } from 'fast-equals';
const object = {
array: [123, { deep: 'value' }],
map: new Map([
['foo', {}],
[{ bar: 'baz' }, 'quz'],
]),
};
const copiedObject = copy(object);
console.log(copiedObject === object);
console.log(deepEqual(copiedObject, object));
API
copy
Deeply copy the object passed.
import copy from 'fast-copy';
const copied = copy({ foo: 'bar' });
copyStrict
Deeply copy the object passed, but with additional strictness when replicating the original object:
- Properties retain their original property descriptor
- Non-enumerable keys are copied
- Non-standard properties (e.g., keys on arrays / maps / sets) are copied
import { copyStrict } from 'fast-copy';
const object = { foo: 'bar' };
object.nonEnumerable = Object.defineProperty(object, 'bar', {
enumerable: false,
value: 'baz',
});
const copied = copy(object);
NOTE: This method is significantly slower than copy
, so it is recommended to only use this when you have specific use-cases that require it.
createCopier
Create a custom copier based on the type-specific methods passed. This is useful if you want to squeeze out maximum performance, or perform something other than a standard deep copy.
import { createCopier } from 'fast-copy';
const copyShallow = createCopier({
array: (array) => [...array],
map: (map) => new Map(map.entries()),
object: (object) => ({ ...object }),
set: (set) => new Set(set.values()),
});
Each internal copier method has the following contract:
type InternalCopier<Value> = (value: Value, state: State) => Value;
interface State {
Constructor: any;
cache: WeakMap;
copier: InternalCopier<any>;
prototype: any;
}
Any method overriding the defaults must maintain this contract.
Copier methods
array
=> Array
arrayBuffer
=> ArrayBuffer
, Float32Array
, Float64Array
, Int8Array
, Int16Array
, Int32Array
, Uint8Array
, Uint8ClampedArray
, Uint16Array
, Uint32Array
, Uint64Array
blob
=> Blob
dataView
=> DataView
date
=> Date
error
=> Error
, AggregateError
, EvalError
, RangeError
, ReferenceError
, SyntaxError
, TypeError
, URIError
map
=> Map
object
=> Object
, or any custom constructorregExp
=> RegExp
set
=> Set
Copier state
cache
If you want to maintain circular reference handling, then you'll need the methods to handle cache population for future lookups:
function shallowlyCloneArray<Value extends any[]>(
value: Value,
state: State
): Value {
const clone = [...value];
state.cache.set(value, clone);
return clone;
}
copier
copier
is provided for recursive calls with deeply-nested objects.
function deeplyCloneArray<Value extends any[]>(
value: Value,
state: State
): Value {
const clone = [];
state.cache.set(value, clone);
value.forEach((item) => state.copier(item, state));
return clone;
}
Note above I am using forEach
instead of a simple map
. This is because it is highly recommended to store the clone in cache
eagerly when deeply copying, so that nested circular references are handled correctly.
Constructor
/ prototype
Both Constructor
and prototype
properties are only populated with complex objects that are not standard objects or arrays. This is mainly useful for custom subclasses of these globals, or maintaining custom prototypes of objects.
function deeplyCloneSubclassArray<Value extends CustomArray>(
value: Value,
state: State
): Value {
const clone = new state.Constructor();
state.cache.set(value, clone);
value.forEach((item) => clone.push(item));
return clone;
}
function deeplyCloneCustomObject<Value extends CustomObject>(
value: Value,
state: State
): Value {
const clone = Object.create(state.prototype);
state.cache.set(value, clone);
Object.entries(value).forEach(([k, v]) => (clone[k] = v));
return clone;
}
createStrictCopier
Create a custom copier based on the type-specific methods passed, but defaulting to the same functions normally used for copyStrict
. This is useful if you want to squeeze out better performance while maintaining strict requirements, or perform something other than a strict deep copy.
const createStrictClone = (value, clone) =>
Object.getOwnPropertyNames(value).reduce(
(clone, property) =>
Object.defineProperty(
clone,
property,
Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(value, property) || {
configurable: true,
enumerable: true,
value: clone[property],
writable: true,
}
),
clone
);
const copyStrictShallow = createStrictCopier({
array: (array) => createStrictClone(array, []),
map: (map) => createStrictClone(map, new Map(map.entries())),
object: (object) => createStrictClone(object, {}),
set: (set) => createStrictClone(set, new Set(set.values())),
});
NOTE: This method creates a copier that is significantly slower than copy
, as well as likely a copier created by createCopier
, so it is recommended to only use this when you have specific use-cases that require it.
Types supported
The following object types are deeply cloned when they are either properties on the object passed, or the object itself:
Array
ArrayBuffer
Boolean
primitive wrappers (e.g., new Boolean(true)
)Blob
Buffer
DataView
Date
Float32Array
Float64Array
Int8Array
Int16Array
Int32Array
Map
Number
primitive wrappers (e.g., new Number(123)
)Object
RegExp
Set
String
primitive wrappers (e.g., new String('foo')
)Uint8Array
Uint8ClampedArray
Uint16Array
Uint32Array
React
components- Custom constructors
The following object types are copied directly, as they are either primitives, cannot be cloned, or the common use-case implementation does not expect cloning:
AsyncFunction
Boolean
primitivesError
Function
GeneratorFunction
Number
primitivesNull
Promise
String
primitivesSymbol
Undefined
WeakMap
WeakSet
Circular objects are supported out of the box. By default, a cache based on WeakSet
is used, but if WeakSet
is not available then a fallback is used. The benchmarks quoted below are based on use of WeakSet
.
Aspects of default copiers
Inherently, what is considered a valid copy is subjective because of different requirements and use-cases. For this library, some decisions were explicitly made for the default copiers of specific object types, and those decisions are detailed below. If your use-cases require different handling, you can always create your own custom copier with createCopier
or createStrictCopier
.
Error references are copied directly, instead of creating a new *Error
object
While it would be relatively trivial to copy over the message and stack to a new object of the same Error
subclass, it is a common practice to "override" the message or stack, and copies would not retain this mutation. As such, the original reference is copied.
The constructor of the original object is used, instead of using known globals
Starting in ES2015, native globals can be subclassed like any custom class. When copying, we explicitly reuse the constructor of the original object. However, the expectation is that these subclasses would have the same constructur signature as their native base class. This is a common community practice, but there is the possibility of inaccuracy if the contract differs.
Generator objects are copied, but still reference the original generator's state
Generator objects are specific types of iterators, but appear like standard objects that just have a few methods (next
, throw
, return
). These methods are bound to the internal state of the generator, which cannot be copied effectively. Normally this would be treated like other "uncopiable" objects and simply pass the reference through, however the "validation" of whether it is a generator object or a standard object is not guaranteed (duck-typing) and there is a runtime cost associated with. Therefore, the simplest path of treating it like a standard object (copying methods to a new object) was taken.
Benchmarks
Simple objects
Small number of properties, all values are primitives
| Operations / second |
---|
fast-copy | 5,880,312 |
lodash.cloneDeep | 2,706,261 |
clone | 2,207,231 |
deepclone | 1,274,810 |
fast-clone | 1,239,952 |
ramda | 1,146,152 |
fast-copy (strict) | 852,382 |
Complex objects
Large number of properties, values are a combination of primitives and complex objects
| Operations / second |
---|
fast-copy | 162,858 |
ramda | 142,104 |
deepclone | 133,607 |
fast-clone | 101,143 |
clone | 70,872 |
fast-copy (strict) | 62,961 |
lodash.cloneDeep | 62,060 |
Big data
Very large number of properties with high amount of nesting, mainly objects and arrays
| Operations / second |
---|
fast-copy | 303 |
fast-clone | 245 |
deepclone | 151 |
lodash.cloneDeep | 150 |
clone | 93 |
fast-copy (strict) | 90 |
ramda | 42 |
Circular objects
Objects that deeply reference themselves
| Operations / second |
---|
fast-copy | 2,420,466 |
deepclone | 1,386,896 |
ramda | 1,024,108 |
lodash.cloneDeep | 989,796 |
clone | 987,721 |
fast-copy (strict) | 617,602 |
fast-clone | 0 (not supported) |
Special objects
Custom constructors, React components, etc
| Operations / second |
---|
fast-copy | 152,792 |
clone | 74,347 |
fast-clone | 66,576 |
lodash.cloneDeep | 64,760 |
ramda | 53,542 |
deepclone | 28,823 |
fast-copy (strict) | 21,362 |
Development
Standard practice, clone the repo and yarn
(or npm i
) to get the dependencies. The following npm scripts are available:
- benchmark => run benchmark tests against other equality libraries
- build => run
build:esm
, build:cjs
, build:umd
, and build:min
scripts - build:cjs => build CJS files and types
- build:esm => build ESM files and types
- build:min => build minified files and types
- build:umd => build UMD files and types
- clean => run
rimraf
on the dist
folder - dev => start webpack playground App
- dist => run
clean
and build
scripts - lint => run ESLint on all files in
src
folder (also runs on dev
script) - lint:fix => run
lint
script, but with auto-fixer - prepublishOnly => run
lint
, test:coverage
, and dist
scripts - release => run
prepublishOnly
and release with new version - release:beta => run
prepublishOnly
and release with new beta version - release:dry => run
prepublishOnly
and simulate a new release - start => run
dev
- test => run AVA with NODE_ENV=test on all files in
test
folder - test:coverage => run same script as
test
with code coverage calculation via nyc
- test:watch => run same script as
test
but keep persistent watcher - typecheck => run
tsc
on the codebase