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    Redux: Avoiding Object Mutations with Object.assign() and ...spread
    2m 38s

Redux: Avoiding Object Mutations with Object.assign() and ...spread

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Learn how to use Object.assign() and the spread operator proposed for ES7 to avoid mutating objects.

Lars Rye Jeppesen
Lars Rye Jeppesen
~ 9 years ago

This is really cool stuff.. gonna use this with Angular2. Thank you

Simon Vrachliotis
Simon Vrachliotis
~ 9 years ago

Came to learn about Redux, finding myself learning a lot about pure functions and immutability... This is awesome!

Dan Abramov
Dan Abramov(instructor)
~ 9 years ago

I’m glad to have tricked you!

Liang
Liang
~ 9 years ago

"...todo" is like shallow copy? Would that be problematic if each todo obj is actually a more complicated and nested obj?

Dan Abramov
Dan Abramov(instructor)
~ 9 years ago

Yes, it will make a shallow copy. If you change a single field on it, it would not be a problem because you want to keep all other properties the same even if they are nested objects. Shallow copy is exactly what you need when you change a specific single field.

However if you want to perform a deep change it will be more complicated: you will need to shallowly copy all objects “on the way to” that change. This is exactly where you’d use the reducer composition pattern again, to delegate updating some field to a subreducer.

jean-michel
jean-michel
~ 9 years ago

while Object.assign() would do the job, curious to know why you have not mention the usage of lodash

The following would do the job with the pure function constraint respected

function toggleTodo(todo) { return .assign(.clone(todo), {completed: !todo.completed}); };

~ 8 years ago

It seems the spread operator in object deconstruction is not supported by ES6.

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/31115276/ecmascript-6-spread-operator-in-object-deconstruction-support-in-typescript-and

Jiwon
Jiwon
~ 8 years ago

This course is very helpful to understand redux and es6. Thank you for Dan!! Good job!

Christian
Christian
~ 7 years ago

Avoiding object mutations is made way easier with Immutable JS:

const { Map } = Immutable;

const toggleTodo = todo => {
  return todo.update("completed", completed => !completed);
};

const testToggleTodo = () => {
  const todoBefore = Map({
    id: 0,
    text: "Learn Redux",
    completed: false
  });
  const todoAfter = Map({
    id: 0,
    text: "Learn Redux",
    completed: true
  });

  expect(toggleTodo(todoBefore)).toEqual(todoAfter);
  expect(todoBefore.get("completed")).toEqual(false);
};

testToggleTodo();
console.log("All tests passed.");
Charles Owen
Charles Owen
~ 7 years ago

This may be merely a question of semantics, but according to the documentation on MDN, Object.assign does not merely copy properties from source to target, rather it calls getters on the source and setters on the target.

"The Object.assign() method only copies enumerable and own properties from a source object to a target object. It uses [[Get]] on the source and [[Set]] on the target, so it will invoke getters and setters. Therefore it assigns properties versus just copying or defining new properties."

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/assign