Native deep cloning
It’s called “structured cloning”, works experimentally in Node 11 and later, and hopefully will land in browsers. See this answer for more details.
Fast cloning with data loss – JSON.parse/stringify
If you do not use Date
s, functions, undefined
, Infinity
, RegExps, Maps, Sets, Blobs, FileLists, ImageDatas, sparse Arrays, Typed Arrays or other complex types within your object, a very simple one liner to deep clone an object is:
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(object))
const a = { string: 'string', number: 123, bool: false, nul: null, date: new Date(), // stringified undef: undefined, // lost inf: Infinity, // forced to 'null' re: /.*/, // lost } console.log(a); console.log(typeof a.date); // Date object const clone = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(a)); console.log(clone); console.log(typeof clone.date); // result of .toISOString()
Run code snippetExpand snippet
See Corban’s answer for benchmarks.
Reliable cloning using a library
Since cloning objects is not trivial (complex types, circular references, function etc.), most major libraries provide function to clone objects. Don’t reinvent the wheel – if you’re already using a library, check if it has an object cloning function. For example,
- lodash –
cloneDeep
; can be imported separately via the lodash.clonedeep module and is probably your best choice if you’re not already using a library that provides a deep cloning function - AngularJS –
angular.copy
- jQuery –
jQuery.extend(true, { }, oldObject)
;.clone()
only clones DOM elements - just library –
just-clone
; Part of a library of zero-dependency npm modules that do just do one thing. Guilt-free utilities for every occasion.
ES6 (shallow copy)
For completeness, note that ES6 offers two shallow copy mechanisms: Object.assign()
and the spread syntax. which copies values of all enumerable own properties from one object to another. For example:
var A1 = {a: "2"}; var A2 = Object.assign({}, A1); var A3 = {...A1}; // Spread Syntax