Collection merger library.
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Published
Jan 6, 2026
$ dotnet add package CollectionMergerSynchronize/merge collections while generating a change report (added/updated/removed), including nested collection merges.
net8.0, net9.0, net10.0.MapFrom(...) or .MapFromAsync(...) on any collection, passing another collection to merge fromSyncReport with a list of ChangeRecord itemsSee CHANGELOG.md for release history.
dotnet add package CollectionMerger
Install-Package CollectionMerger
<PackageReference Include="CollectionMerger" Version="x.y.z" />
You merge a source collection into a destination collection by providing:
matchPredicate: how to match a source item to an existing destination item (usually by an ID)mapProperties: how to copy/update properties from source to destinationisSourceDeleted (optional): treat a source item as deleted even when it exists in the source collectiondeleteDestination (optional): custom delete action for destination items (default removes from the collection)using CollectionMerger;
var destination = new List<Person>
{
new() { Id = 1, Name = "Alice" },
new() { Id = 2, Name = "Bob" }
};
var source = new List<PersonDto>
{
new() { Id = 1, Name = "Alice Updated" },
new() { Id = 3, Name = "Charlie" }
};
var report = destination.MapFrom(
source: source,
matchPredicate: (src, dest) => src.Id == dest.Id,
mapProperties: (src, dest, _m) =>
{
dest.Id = src.Id;
dest.Name = src.Name;
});
Console.WriteLine($"Added: {report.AddedCount}, Updated: {report.UpdatedCount}, Removed: {report.RemovedCount}");
For async scenarios (e.g., fetching related data from a database, calling APIs), use MapFromAsync:
using CollectionMerger;
var report = await destination.MapFromAsync(
source: source,
matchPredicate: async (src, dest) =>
{
// Can perform async operations here
return src.Id == dest.Id;
},
mapProperties: async (src, dest, _m) =>
{
dest.Id = src.Id;
dest.Name = await FetchUpdatedNameAsync(src.Id); // Example async operation
});
Console.WriteLine($"Added: {report.AddedCount}, Updated: {report.UpdatedCount}, Removed: {report.RemovedCount}");
For nested collections, call MapFrom(...) on the child collection and pass the parent Mapper so paths get nested.
using CollectionMerger;
var report = destinationPeople.MapFrom(
source: sourcePeople,
matchPredicate: (srcPerson, destPerson) => srcPerson.ID == destPerson.ID,
mapProperties: (srcPerson, destPerson, m1) =>
{
destPerson.ID = srcPerson.ID;
destPerson.Name = srcPerson.Name;
destPerson.Cats.MapFrom(
parent: m1,
source: srcPerson.Cats,
matchPredicate: (srcCat, destCat) => srcCat.ID == destCat.ID,
mapProperties: (srcCat, destCat, _m2) =>
{
destCat.ID = srcCat.ID;
destCat.Name = srcCat.Name;
});
});
For async nested collections, use MapFromAsync:
using CollectionMerger;
var report = await destinationPeople.MapFromAsync(
source: sourcePeople,
matchPredicate: async (srcPerson, destPerson) => srcPerson.ID == destPerson.ID,
mapProperties: async (srcPerson, destPerson, m1) =>
{
destPerson.ID = srcPerson.ID;
destPerson.Name = srcPerson.Name;
await destPerson.Cats.MapFromAsync(
parent: m1,
source: srcPerson.Cats,
matchPredicate: async (srcCat, destCat) => srcCat.ID == destCat.ID,
mapProperties: async (srcCat, destCat, _m2) =>
{
destCat.ID = srcCat.ID;
destCat.Name = await FetchCatNameAsync(srcCat.ID); // Example async operation
});
});
foreach (var change in report.Changes)
{
Console.WriteLine($"{change.ChangeType}: {change.Path}");
if (change.PropertyChanges is null)
continue;
foreach (var prop in change.PropertyChanges)
Console.WriteLine($" - {prop.PropertyName}: '{prop.OldValue}' -> '{prop.NewValue}'");
}
Mark a source item as deleted and remove its destination match (default removal):
var report = destination.MapFrom(
source: source,
matchPredicate: (src, dest) => src.ID == dest.ID,
mapProperties: (src, dest, _m) =>
{
dest.ID = src.ID;
dest.Name = src.Name;
},
isSourceDeleted: src => src.Deleted);
Provide a custom delete action (soft delete instead of removing):
var report = destination.MapFrom(
source: source,
matchPredicate: (src, dest) => src.ID == dest.ID,
mapProperties: (src, dest, _m) =>
{
dest.ID = src.ID;
dest.Name = src.Name;
},
deleteDestination: dest => dest.Deleted = true);
SyncReport.Changes contains ChangeRecord entries:
ChangeType: Added, Updated, or RemovedPath: a stable-ish path for the item (supports nesting)Item: the destination item instancePropertyChanges: only present for UpdatedPaths look like Person[1] and Person[1].Cat[3].
The [...] value is chosen by looking for a public readable ID or Id property on either the source or destination item. If neither exists, it becomes ?.
After your mapProperties delegate runs, CollectionMerger snapshots public instance scalar properties (excluding enumerables except string) and records an Updated change if any of those values differ.
No. Collection properties are ignored for property change detection.
If you want nested changes, perform nested merges with the nested overload of MapFrom(...).
ICollection<TDestination>TDestination must have a parameterless constructor (new() constraint)matchPredicate (make sure it uniquely identifies items)CollectionMerger is similar to AutoMapper.Collection.
Key differences:
If you hit a bug or want to request a feature, please open an issue: https://github.com/alexdresko/collection-merger/issues
Releases are automated via Release Please.
main using Conventional Commits.CHANGELOG.md and package version.The release workflow expects a GitHub Actions secret:
NUGET_API_KEY (or NUGET_TOKEN): a NuGet.org API key with permission to push packages.