Merge 2 arrays of objects

If you want to merge 2 arrays of objects in JavaScript. You can use this one line trick

Array.prototype.push.apply(arr1,arr2);

For Example

var arr1 = [{name: "lang", value: "English"},{name: "age", value: "18"}];
var arr2 = [{name : "childs", value: '5'}, {name: "lang", value: "German"}];

Array.prototype.push.apply(arr1,arr2); 

console.log(arr1);  // final merged result will be in arr1

Output:

[{"name":"lang","value":"English"},
{"name":"age","value":"18"},
{"name":"childs","value":"5"},
{"name":"lang","value":"German"}]

With ES6 you can do it very easy as below:

var arr1 = new Array({name: "lang", value: "German"}, {name: "age", value: "18"});
var arr2 = new Array({name : "childs", value: '5'}, {name: "lang", value: "German"});
var arr3 = [...arr1, ...arr2];

Output:

    arr3 = [
      {"name":"lang","value":"German"},
      {"name":"age","value":"18"},
      {"name":"childs","value":"5"},
      {"name":"lang","value":"German"}
    ]

For those who are experimenting with modern things:

var odd = [{
    name: "1",
    arr: "in odd"
  },
  {
    name: "3",
    arr: "in odd"
  }
];

var even = [{
    name: "1",
    arr: "in even"
  },
  {
    name: "2",
    arr: "in even"
  },
  {
    name: "4",
    arr: "in even"
  }
];

// ----
// ES5 using Array.filter and Array.find
function merge(a, b, prop) {
  var reduced = a.filter(function(aitem) {
    return !b.find(function(bitem) {
      return aitem[prop] === bitem[prop];
    });
  });
  return reduced.concat(b);
}
console.log("ES5", merge(odd, even, "name"));

// ----
// ES6 arrow functions
function merge(a, b, prop) {
  var reduced = a.filter(aitem => !b.find(bitem => aitem[prop] === bitem[prop]))
  return reduced.concat(b);
}
console.log("ES6", merge(odd, even, "name"));

// ----
// ES6 one-liner
var merge = (a, b, p) => a.filter(aa => !b.find(bb => aa[p] === bb[p])).concat(b);


console.log("ES6 one-liner", merge(odd, even, "name"));

// Results
// ( stuff in the "b" array replaces things in the "a" array )
// [
//    {
//         "name": "3",
//         "arr": "in odd"
//     },
//     {
//         "name": "1",
//         "arr": "in even"
//     },
//     {
//         "name": "2",
//         "arr": "in even"
//     },
//     {
//         "name": "4",
//         "arr": "in even"
//     }
// ]


// for posterity, here's the old skool version

function merge(a, b, prop) {
  var reduced = [];
  for (var i = 0; i < a.length; i++) {
    var aitem = a[i];
    var found = false;
    for (var ii = 0; ii < b.length; ii++) {
      if (aitem[prop] === b[ii][prop]) {
        found = true;
        break;
      }
    }
    if (!found) {
      reduced.push(aitem);
    }
  }
  return reduced.concat(b);
}

Update 12 Oct 2019

New version based only on newer Javascript and without the need of any 3rd party library.

const mergeByProperty = (target, source, prop) => {
  source.forEach(sourceElement => {
    let targetElement = target.find(targetElement => {
      return sourceElement[prop] === targetElement[prop];
    })
    targetElement ? Object.assign(targetElement, sourceElement) : target.push(sourceElement);
  })
}
var target /* arr1 */ = [{name: "lang", value: "English"}, {name: "age", value: "18"}];
var source /* arr2 */ = [{name : "childs", value: '5'}, {name: "lang", value: "German"}];

mergeByProperty(target, source, 'name');

console.log(target)

This answer was getting old, libs like lodash and underscore are much less needed these days. In this new version, the target (arr1) array is the one we’re working with and want to keep up to date. The source (arr2) array is where the new data is coming from, and we want it merged into our target array.

We loop over the source array looking for new data, and for every object that is not yet found in our target array we simply add that object using target.push(sourceElement) If, based on our key property ('name'), an object is already in our target array - we update its properties and values using Object.assign(targetElement, sourceElement). Our “target” will always be the same array and with updated content.


Old answer using underscore or lodash

I always arrive here from google and I'm always not satisfy from the answers. YOU answer is good but it'll be easier and neater using underscore.js

DEMO: http://jsfiddle.net/guya/eAWKR/

Here is a more general function that will merge 2 arrays using a property of their objects. In this case the property is 'name'

var arr1 = [{name: "lang", value: "English"}, {name: "age", value: "18"}];
var arr2 = [{name : "childs", value: '5'}, {name: "lang", value: "German"}];

function mergeByProperty(arr1, arr2, prop) {
  _.each(arr2, function(arr2obj) {
    var arr1obj = _.find(arr1, function(arr1obj) {
      return arr1obj[prop] === arr2obj[prop];
    });

    arr1obj ? _.extend(arr1obj, arr2obj) : arr1.push(arr2obj);
  });
}

mergeByProperty(arr1, arr2, 'name');

console.log(arr1);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lodash.js/4.17.15/lodash.core.min.js"></script>
[{name: "lang", value: "German"}, {name: "age", value: "18"}, {name : "childs", value: '5'}]

Very simple using ES6 spread operator:

const array1 = [{a: 'HI!'}, {b: 'HOW'}]
const array2 = [{c: 'ARE'}, {d: 'YOU?'}]

const mergedArray = [ ...array1, ...array2 ]
console.log('Merged Array: ', mergedArray)
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/15.1.0/react-dom.min.js"></script>

Merged Array: [ {a: 'HI!'}, {b: 'HOW'} {c: 'ARE'}, {d: 'YOU?'} ]

Note: The above solution is to just merge two arrays using ES6 spread operator.

Edit on 07 January 2020 by @bh4r4th : As the context changed due to edits after my initial solution. I would like to update my solution to match current criteria. i.e.,

  1. Merger array objects without creating duplicate objects and,

  2. update the value if the name property already exists in the prior array

const arr1 = [
    { name: "lang", value: "English" },
    { name: "age", value: "18" }
]
const arr2 = [
    { name: "childs", value: '2' }, 
    { name: "lang", value: "German" }
]
const arr3 = [
    { name: "lang", value: "German" },
    { name: "age", value: "28" },
    { name: "childs", value: '5' }
]

// Convert to key value dictionary or object
const convertToKeyValueDict = arrayObj => {
    const val = {}
    arrayObj.forEach(ob => {
        val[ob.name] = ob.value
    })
    return val
}

// update or merge array
const updateOrMerge = (a1, a2) => {
    const ob1 = convertToKeyValueDict(a1)
    const ob2 = convertToKeyValueDict(a2)
    // Note: Spread operator with objects used here
    const merged_obj = {...ob1, ...ob2}
    const val = Object.entries(merged_obj)
    return val.map(obj => ({ name: obj[0], value: obj[1] }))
}

const v1 = updateOrMerge(arr1, arr2)
const v2 = updateOrMerge(v1, arr3)
console.log(`Merged array1 and array2: ${JSON.stringify(v1)} \n\n`)
console.log(`Merged above response and array3: ${JSON.stringify(v2)} \n\n`)
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