mixin-object
Mixin the own and inherited properties of other objects onto the first object. Pass an empty object as the first arg to shallow clone.
Follow this project's author, Jon Schlinkert, for updates on this project and others.
Install
Install with npm:
$ npm install --save mixin-object
If you only want to combine own-properties, use extend-shallow.
Usage
var mixin = require('mixin-object');
var obj = {c: 'c'};
var foo = mixin({a: 'a'}, {b: 'b'});
console.log(foo);
//=> {c: 'c', a: 'a', b: 'b'}
console.log(obj);
//=> {c: 'c'}
mixin({}, {a: 'a'}, {b: 'b'});
//=> {a: 'a', b: 'b'}
About
Related projects
You might also be interested in these projects:
- assign-deep: Deeply assign the enumerable properties and/or es6 Symbol properies of source objects to the target… more | homepage
- defaults-deep: Like
extend
but recursively copies only the missing properties/values to the target object. | homepage
- extend-shallow: Extend an object with the properties of additional objects. node.js/javascript util. | homepage
- for-in: Iterate over the own and inherited enumerable properties of an object, and return an object… more | homepage
- for-own: Iterate over the own enumerable properties of an object, and return an object with properties… more | homepage
- is-plain-object: Returns true if an object was created by the
Object
constructor. | homepage
- isobject: Returns true if the value is an object and not an array or null. | homepage
- merge-deep: Recursively merge values in a javascript object. | homepage
- mixin-deep: Deeply mix the properties of objects into the first object. Like merge-deep, but doesn't clone. | homepage
Contributing
Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.
Building docs
(This project's readme.md is generated by verb, please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in the .verb.md readme template.)
To generate the readme, run the following command:
$ npm install -g verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme && verb
Running tests
Running and reviewing unit tests is a great way to get familiarized with a library and its API. You can install dependencies and run tests with the following command:
$ npm install && npm test
Author
Jon Schlinkert
License
Copyright © 2017, Jon Schlinkert.
Released under the MIT License.
This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.6.0, on September 04, 2017.