Set nested properties on an object using dot notation.
Please consider following this project's author, Jon Schlinkert, and consider starring the project to show your ❤️ and support.
Install with npm (requires Node.js >=11.0):
$ npm install --save set-value
Please update to version 3.0.1 or later, a critical bug was fixed in that version.
const set = require('set-value');
const obj = {};
set(obj, 'a.b.c', 'd');
console.log(obj);
//=> { a: { b: { c: 'd' } } }
Signature:
set(object, property_path, value[, options]);
object
{Object}: The object to setvalue
onpath
{String|Symbol|Array}: The path of the property to set.value
{any}: The value to set onobj[prop]
options
{Object}: See all available options
You may pass a string, symbol, or array of strings or symbols. By default, when a string is passed this library will split the string on .
or a custom separator It's useful to pass an array
Escaping with backslashes
Prevent set-value from splitting on a dot by prefixing it with backslashes:
console.log(set({}, 'a\\.b.c', 'd'));
//=> { 'a.b': { c: 'd' } }
console.log(set({}, 'a\\.b\\.c', 'd'));
//=> { 'a.b.c': 'd' }
Do not split properties that include a /
. By default, set-value assumes that properties with a /
are not intended to be split. This option allows you to disable default behavior.
Note that this option cannot be used if options.separator
is set to /
.
Type: boolean
Default: true
Example
console.log(set({}, 'https://github.com', true));
//=> { 'https://github.com': true }
console.log(set({}, 'https://github.com', true, { preservePaths: false }));
//=> { 'https://github': { com: true } }
Custom separator to use for splitting object paths.
Type: string
Default: .
Example
console.log(set(obj, 'auth/userpass/users/bob', '*****', { separator: '/' }));
//=> { auth: { userpass: { users: { bob: '*****' } } } }
Custom .split()
function to use.
Allows you to update plain object values, instead of overwriting them.
Type: boolean|function
- A custom merge
function may be defined if you need to deep merge. Otherwise, when merge
is true
, a shallow merge will be performed by Object.assign()
.
Default: undefined
Example
const obj = { foo: { bar: { baz: 'qux' } } };
set(obj, 'foo.bar.fez', 'zzz', { merge: true });
//=> { foo: { bar: { baz: 'qux', fez: 'zzz' } } }
Benchmarks were run on a MacBook Pro 2.5 GHz Intel Core i7, 16 GB 1600 MHz DDR3.
# deep (194 bytes)
deep-object x 823,287 ops/sec ±1.00% (90 runs sampled)
deep-property x 1,787,990 ops/sec ±0.82% (92 runs sampled)
deephas x 840,700 ops/sec ±0.95% (93 runs sampled)
dot-prop x 1,249,663 ops/sec ±0.89% (90 runs sampled)
dot2val x 2,067,212 ops/sec ±1.08% (91 runs sampled)
es5-dot-prop x 1,668,806 ops/sec ±0.92% (92 runs sampled)
lodash-set x 1,286,725 ops/sec ±0.82% (90 runs sampled)
object-path-set x 1,261,242 ops/sec ±1.63% (90 runs sampled)
object-set x 285,369 ops/sec ±0.91% (90 runs sampled)
set-value x 2,076,931 ops/sec ±0.86% (93 runs sampled)
fastest is set-value, dot2val (by 203% avg)
# medium (98 bytes)
deep-object x 5,811,161 ops/sec ±1.12% (90 runs sampled)
deep-property x 4,075,885 ops/sec ±0.91% (90 runs sampled)
deephas x 1,508,136 ops/sec ±0.82% (92 runs sampled)
dot-prop x 2,809,838 ops/sec ±1.16% (87 runs sampled)
dot2val x 4,600,890 ops/sec ±0.76% (91 runs sampled)
es5-dot-prop x 3,263,790 ops/sec ±0.97% (91 runs sampled)
lodash-set x 3,486,628 ops/sec ±1.20% (90 runs sampled)
object-path-set x 3,729,018 ops/sec ±0.90% (92 runs sampled)
object-set x 973,961 ops/sec ±0.80% (92 runs sampled)
set-value x 6,941,474 ops/sec ±1.24% (90 runs sampled)
fastest is set-value (by 206% avg)
# shallow (101 bytes)
deep-object x 9,416,410 ops/sec ±1.19% (89 runs sampled)
deep-property x 5,108,536 ops/sec ±0.98% (93 runs sampled)
deephas x 1,706,979 ops/sec ±0.98% (86 runs sampled)
dot-prop x 4,045,902 ops/sec ±1.10% (92 runs sampled)
dot2val x 5,862,418 ops/sec ±0.88% (91 runs sampled)
es5-dot-prop x 4,439,646 ops/sec ±1.18% (90 runs sampled)
lodash-set x 9,303,292 ops/sec ±1.19% (89 runs sampled)
object-path-set x 5,657,479 ops/sec ±0.95% (93 runs sampled)
object-set x 2,020,041 ops/sec ±0.92% (91 runs sampled)
set-value x 11,272,227 ops/sec ±1.36% (88 runs sampled)
fastest is set-value (by 213% avg)
Clone this library into a local directory:
$ git clone https://github.com/jonschlinkert/set-value.git
Then install devDependencies and run benchmarks:
$ npm install && node benchmark
These are just a few of the duplicate libraries on NPM.
- bury fails all of the tests. I even wrapped it to have it return the object instead of the value, but with all of that work it still fails the vast majority of tests.
- deep-get-set fails 22 of 26 unit tests.
- deep-object fails 25 of 26 unit tests, completely butchered given objects.
- deep-property fails 17 of 26 unit tests.
- deep-set fails 13 of 26 unit tests.
- deephas fails 17 of 26 unit tests.
- dot-prop fails 9 of 26 unit tests.
- dot2val fails 17 of 26 unit tests.
- es5-dot-prop fails 15 of 26 unit tests.
- getsetdeep fails all unit tests due to
this
being used improperly in the methods. I was able to patch it by binding the (plain) object to the methods, but it still fails 17 of 26 unit tests. - lodash.set fails 11 of 26 unit tests.
- object-path-set fails 12 of 26 unit tests.
- object-path fails 16 of 26 unit tests.
- object-set fails 13 of 26 unit tests.
- set-nested-prop fails 24 of 26 unit tests.
- setvalue (this library is almost identical to a previous version of this library)
- Many dozens of others
Others that do the same thing, but use a completely different API
- deep-set-in
- set-deep
- set-deep-prop
- bury
- Many dozens of others
- Added support for a custom
split
function to be passed on the options. - Removed support for splitting on brackets, since a custom function can be passed to do this now.
- Adds support for escaping with double or single quotes. See escaping for examples.
- Will no longer split inside brackets or braces. See bracket support for examples.
If there are any regressions please create a bug report. Thanks!
Contributing
Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.
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
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
You might also be interested in these projects:
- assign-value: Assign a value or extend a deeply nested property of an object using object path… more | homepage
- get-value: Use property paths like 'a.b.c' to get a nested value from an object. Even works… more | homepage
- has-value: Returns true if a value exists, false if empty. Works with deeply nested values using… more | homepage
- merge-value: Similar to assign-value but deeply merges object values or nested values using object path/dot notation. | homepage
- omit-value: Omit properties from an object or deeply nested property of an object using object path… more | homepage
- set-value: Set nested properties on an object using dot notation. | homepage
- union-value: Set an array of unique values as the property of an object. Supports setting deeply… more | homepage
- unset-value: Delete nested properties from an object using dot notation. | homepage
Commits | Contributor |
---|---|
87 | jonschlinkert |
4 | doowb |
2 | mbelsky |
1 | dkebler |
1 | GlennKintscher |
1 | petermorlion |
1 | abetomo |
1 | zeidoo |
1 | ready-research |
1 | wtgtybhertgeghgtwtg |
Jon Schlinkert
Copyright © 2021, Jon Schlinkert. Released under the MIT License.
This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.8.0, on September 12, 2021.