Aurora Strategic JSON Merge allows diffing and merging of objects, including array entries, however each array entry needs to have an object with a key
attribute to serve as a unique identifier.
This repo contains a modified version of Aurora Strategic JSON Merge which fits Themezer's needs.
npm install https://github.com/tromkom/aurora-strategic-json-merge-patch
The key attribute should always be a string
Diffs two objects and returns an array of patches
const { diff } = require("aurora-strategic-json-merge-patch");
let base = [
{
id: "1",
val: 123,
arr: [
{
id: "1",
val: 1
}
]
},
{
id: "2",
val: 456
}
];
let newBase = [
{
id: "1",
val: 456,
arr: [
{
id: "1",
val: 1
},
{
id: "2",
val: 222
}
]
}
];
let patches = diff(base, newBase, "id");
console.log(patches);
/*
[
{ id: '1', val: 456, arr: [ { id: '2', val: 222 } ] },
{ id: '2', __self: null }
]
*/
Using the patch from diffing on an equal base object, will return the new base.
const { patch } = require("aurora-strategic-json-merge-patch");
let base = [
{
id: "1",
val: 123,
arr: [
{
id: "1",
val: 1
}
]
},
{
id: "2",
val: 456
}
];
let patches = [
{ id: "1", val: 456, arr: [{ id: "2", val: 222 }] },
{ id: "2", __self: null }
];
let newBase = patch(base, patches, "id");
console.log(newBase);
/*
[
{
id: '1',
val: 456,
arr: [ { id: '1', val: 1 }, { id: '2', val: 222 } ]
}
]
*/
If you want to use JSON patch you can do that.
Be careful when using JSON patch as the patch will use the "key" as opposed to the index of the array
const { httpPatch } = require("aurora-strategic-json-merge-patch");
let base = [
{
id: "1",
val: 123,
arr: [
{
id: "1",
val: 1
}
]
},
{
id: "2",
val: 456
}
];
let patches = [
{ id: "1", val: 456, arr: [{ id: "2", val: 222 }] },
{ id: "2", __self: null }
];
let httpPatches = base
.map(x => httpPatch(x, patches, "id", `/${x.id}`).body)
.flat();
console.log(httpPatches);
/*
[
{ op: 'replace', path: '/1/val', value: 456 },
{ path: '/1/arr/2', op: 'add', value: { id: '2', val: 222 } },
{ path: '/2', op: 'remove' }
]
*/
Does a strategic JSON Merge that will properly handle arrays (assuming they have a "key").
const { merge } = require("aurora-strategic-json-merge-patch");
let base = [
{
id: "1",
val: 123,
arr: [
{
id: "1",
val: 1
}
]
},
{
id: "2",
val: 456
}
];
let newBase = [
{
id: "1",
val: 456,
arr: [
{
id: "2",
val: 222
}
]
}
];
let res = merge(base, newBase, "id");
console.log(res);
/*
[
{
id: '1',
val: 456,
arr: [ { id: '1', val: 1 }, { id: '2', val: 222 } ]
},
{ id: '2', val: 456 }
]
*/