Reputation: 8506
I have two array as below
const l1 = [ {"a": 1, "a1": 2}, {"b": 3, "b1": 4}, {"c": 5, "c1": 6} ];
const l2 = [ {"d": 2}, {"e": 2}, {"f": 2} ];
How can I use ramda library to combine these two and get result like
[ {"a": 1, "a1": 2, "d": 2}, {"a": 1, "a1": 2, "e": 2}, {"a": 1, "a1": 2, "f": 2},
{"b": 3, "b1": 4, "d": 2}, {"b": 3, "b1": 4, "e": 2}, {"b": 3, "b1": 4, "f": 2},
{"c": 5, "c1": 6, "d": 2}, {"c": 5, "c1": 6, "e": 2}, {"c": 5, "c1": 6, "f": 2} ]
I used
R.map(R.xprod(__, l2, l1)
But not working since i got object inside array.
Thanks in advance.
Upvotes: 2
Views: 4632
Reputation: 516
There is another option to merge arrays using R.reduce function
const input = {
arr1: ['a', 'b'],
arr2: ['c', 'd']
}
R.compose(
R.reduce((acc, cur) => {
return [...acc, ...cur]
}, []),
R.map(([key, value]) => value),
R.toPairs
)(input)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 191986
To get a Cartesian product of two arrays of objects you can create a function by lifting merge:
const fn = R.lift(R.merge)
const l1 = [ {"a": 1, "a1": 2}, {"b": 3, "b1": 4}, {"c": 5, "c1": 6} ];
const l2 = [ {"d": 2}, {"e": 2}, {"f": 2} ];
const result = fn(l1, l2)
console.log(result)
.as-console-wrapper { max-height: 100% !important; top: 0; }
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/ramda/0.27.0/ramda.js" integrity="sha256-buL0byPvI/XRDFscnSc/e0q+sLA65O9y+rbF+0O/4FE=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 386654
With plain Javascript, you could take cartesian product with a double nested reduce by mapping new objects.
This approach works for an arbirary count of arrays (sort of ...).
const
l1 = [{ a: 1, a1: 2 }, { b: 3, b1: 4 }, { c: 5, c1: 6 }],
l2 = [{ d: 2 }, { e: 2 }, { f: 2 }],
result = [l1, l2].reduce((a, b) => a.reduce((r, v) => r.concat(b.map(w => ({ ...v, ...w }))), []));
console.log(result);
.as-console-wrapper { max-height: 100% !important; top: 0; }
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 11001
If not very particular about ramda, you can do as below with one line using flatMap
and map
.
const l1 = [
{ a: 1, a1: 2 },
{ b: 3, b1: 4 },
{ c: 5, c1: 6 }
];
const l2 = [{ d: 2 }, { e: 2 }, { f: 2 }];
const merged = l2.flatMap(item2 => l1.map(item1 => ({ ...item1, ...item2 })));
console.log(JSON.stringify(merged));
Upvotes: 1