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Clement Denis 3cdfd1a34c discovery-piscine: update exercises and test 3 years ago
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README.md discovery-piscine: update exercises and test 3 years ago

README.md

🌟 My House 🏠

One should be aware that copying an objet in Js is not a straightfoward process. Let's try with an object mainHouse. Given what we know, the first instinct would be to do something like this:

let mainHouse = {
  door: 'blue',
  rooms: {
    bedrooms: 2,
    bathrooms: 1,
  },
}

let sameHouse = mainHouse

If we console.log both mainHouse and sameHouse we will obtain exactly the same output:

console.log(mainHouse) // { door: 'blue', rooms: 3 }
console.log(sameHouse) // { door: 'blue', rooms: 3 }

So far, so good. Now, let's get into the issue. Let's paint the door of mainHouse in red.

mainHouse.door = 'red'

If we console.log both mainHouse and sameHouse we will now obtain:

console.log(mainHouse) // { door: 'red', rooms: 3}
console.log(sameHouse) // { door: 'red', rooms: 3}

But wait a second... we just wanted to paint the door of mainHouse. What happened here? Why are both doors painted in red?

Well, unlike primitives that can not changes, (the number 1 will always be the number 1) objects can mutate.

You can add, delete and update properties, so if two different variables are assigned to the same object value, they will both mutate the same object.

We call that a reference, not a copy.

There are multiple ways to copies objects. Understanding the limitations of each of these ways is very important. Which is why this time, you will have to do a bit of research...

Instructions

We will declare the same mainHouse seen in the lesson above.

  • Declare acidHouse which will be a shallow copy of mainHouse.
  • Declare deepHouse which will be a deep copy of mainHouse.

Not in my house!
― Dikembe Mutombo