Copying of an array of objects to another Array without object reference in javascript(Deep copy)

Let me understand: you don't want just have a new array, but you want to create a new instance for all objects are present in the array itself? So if you modify one of the objects in the temp array, that changes is not propagated to the main array?

If it's the case, it depends by the values you're keeping in the main array. If these objects are simple objects, and they can be serialized in JSON, then the quickest way is:

var tempArray = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(mainArray));

If you have more complex objects (like instances created by some your own constructors, html nodes, etc) then you need an approach ad hoc.

Edit:

If you don't have any methods on your newObjectCreation, you could use JSON, however the constructor won't be the same. Otherwise you have to do the copy manually:

var tempArray = [];
for (var i = 0, item; item = mainArray[i++];) {
    tempArray[i] = new newObjectCreation(item.localIP, item.remoteIP, item.areaId);
}

Lodash can be used for deep copying objects _.cloneDeep(value)

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

var deep = _.cloneDeep(objects);
console.log(deep[0] === objects[0]);
// → false

For some other people with the same question. You could also do it this way.
Using the new es6 features you could create a copy of an array (without reference) and a copy of every object without one level of references.

const copy = array.map(object => ({ ...object }))

It's much more functional and idiomatic IMHO

Note: Spread syntax effectively goes one level deep while copying an array. Therefore, it may be unsuitable for copying multidimensional arrays as the following example shows (it's the same with Object.assign() and spread syntax).
More info: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Spread_syntax

So basically if your objects doesn't have objects as properties. This syntax is everything you need. Unfortunately there is not "out of the box" deep clone feature on the spec but you can always use a library if that's what you need

Browser Compatibility Warning: I think it is part of the specification of Ecma now, but some browsers doesn't have full support of spread syntax jet. But using one of the popular transpilers out there you will be fine

Tags:

Javascript