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A JavaScript library to deal with nested immutable structures.

set({ english: { greeting: 'Hi' } }, 'english.greeting', 'Hello')
// → { english: { greeting: 'Hello' } }

push({ i18n: { languages: ['English', 'French'] } }, 'i18n.languages', 'German', 'Spanish')
// → { i18n: { languages: ['English', 'French', 'German', 'Spanish'] } }

immutadot gives you a short and meaningful syntax to apply operations on immutable structures.

npm version Try on RunKit Documentation

CircleCI codecov gitmoji-changelog

🚧 I'm currently rewriting immutadot

Hi 👋, I'm currently rewriting entirely immutadot, and hopefully I will publish a v3 very soon (v2 never reached a satisfying state).

Here is a pick at the new API which uses tagged template literals:

import { set } from 'immutadot'

const animals = {
  weasels: {
    lutraLutra: {
      commonNames: ['eurasian otter'],
    },
  },
}

const newAnimals = set`${animals}.weasels.lutraLutra.name'('Lutrinae')

Check out the v3 branch if you're interested.

Installation

immutadot is available on npm repository.

using yarn:

$ yarn add immutadot

using npm:

$ npm install immutadot

Usage

ES modules:

import { set } from 'immutadot'

CommonJS:

const { set } = require('immutadot')

Example

Quickly set nested properties using set()

import { set } from 'immutadot'

const animals = {
  weasels: {
    lutraLutra: {
      commonNames: ['eurasian otter'],
    },
  },
}

const newAnimals = set(animals, 'weasels.lutraLutra.name', 'Lutrinae')

Learn more about what immutadot can do in the Getting started.

Feel free to try immutadot on runkit.

Documentation

Getting started

A fast overview of immutadot's features is available in the Getting started guide.

API

The detailed API documentations of the different packages are available here:

Looking for older versions API documentation? Links are available here.

Performances

A simple benchmark (freely inspired from one made by mweststrate for immer) reveals that immutadot shows good results compared to other libraries.

⚠️ The following results should be taken with caution, they may vary depending on the hardware, the JavaScript engine, and the kind of operations performed. This particular test updates 10% out of a list of todos items, and was ran with Node 9.8.0 on an Intel® Core™ i7-6560U CPU @ 2.20GHz.

Update small todos list (1000 items):
  ES2015 destructuring: ~17775ops/s (0.06ms/op) on 50000ops
  immutable 3.8.2 (w/o conversion to plain JS objects): ~6737ops/s (0.15ms/op) on 50000ops
  immutable 3.8.2 (w/ conversion to plain JS objects): ~109ops/s (9.17ms/op) on 3274ops
  immer 1.2.0 (proxy implementation w/o autofreeze): ~1132ops/s (0.88ms/op) on 34025ops
  immer 1.2.0 (ES5 implementation w/o autofreeze): ~521ops/s (1.92ms/op) on 15680ops
  qim 0.0.52: ~12042ops/s (0.08ms/op) on 50000ops
  immutadot 1.0.0: ~2351ops/s (0.43ms/op) on 50000ops
Update medium todos list (10000 items):
  ES2015 destructuring: ~1801ops/s (0.56ms/op) on 5000ops
  immutable 3.8.2 (w/o conversion to plain JS objects): ~630ops/s (1.59ms/op) on 5000ops
  immutable 3.8.2 (w/ conversion to plain JS objects): ~10ops/s (95.70ms/op) on 314ops
  immer 1.2.0 (proxy implementation w/o autofreeze): ~111ops/s (9.04ms/op) on 3319ops
  immer 1.2.0 (ES5 implementation w/o autofreeze): ~51ops/s (19.76ms/op) on 1519ops
  qim 0.0.52: ~1257ops/s (0.80ms/op) on 5000ops
  immutadot 1.0.0: ~234ops/s (4.28ms/op) on 5000ops
Update large todos list (100000 items):
  ES2015 destructuring: ~120ops/s (8.34ms/op) on 500ops
  immutable 3.8.2 (w/o conversion to plain JS objects): ~58ops/s (17.28ms/op) on 500ops
  immutable 3.8.2 (w/ conversion to plain JS objects): ~1ops/s (998.81ms/op) on 31ops
  immer 1.2.0 (proxy implementation w/o autofreeze): ~21ops/s (48.68ms/op) on 500ops
  immer 1.2.0 (ES5 implementation w/o autofreeze): ~4ops/s (264.16ms/op) on 114ops
  qim 0.0.52: ~91ops/s (11.01ms/op) on 500ops
  immutadot 1.0.0: ~21ops/s (48.22ms/op) on 500ops

Immutability

In the last few years one of our biggest challenge has been to find an efficient way to detect changes in our data to determine when to re-render our interfaces.

An immutable object is an object that cannot be changed once created. It brings several benefits1:

  • Data changes detection made simple (Shallow comparison)
  • Memoization
  • Improve rendering performances
  • Explicit data changes
  • Avoid side effects

Our approach

Concise

ES2015+ new features are great to deal with arrays and objects. As data structures expand, the code you write to make data immutable gets bigger and less readable. immutadot uses the dot notation to address this issue.

Interoperability

immutadot uses plain JavaScript objects so you can access your data using standard ways. Moreover, it lets you freely enjoy your favorite libraries.

Exhaustive and yet extensible

immutadot comes with a large set of built-in utilities, mostly based on ES2015+. You can also find a package called immutadot-lodash with some of lodash's utilities. You haven't found what you're looking for? Do it yourself with the convert feature.

Learning curve

If you are already familiar with ES2015+ and lodash then you should be able to use immutadot quickly.

Contributing

We want contributing to immutadot to be fun, enjoyable, and educational for anyone, and everyone.

In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we have adopted a Code of Conduct that we expect project participants to commit to. Please read the full text so that you can understand what behavior will and will not be tolerated.

If you are interested in contributing to immutadot, please read our contributing guide to learn more about how to suggest bugfixes and improvements.

License

immutadot is MIT licensed.

Notes