It depends upon what you're pushing. Objects and arrays are pushed as a pointer to the original object . Built-in primitive types like numbers or booleans are pushed as a copy. So, since objects are not copied in any way, there's no deep or shallow copy for them.
Here's a working snippet that shows it:
var array = [];
var x = 4;
let y = {name: "test", type: "data", data: "2-27-2009"};
// primitive value pushes a copy of the value 4
array.push(x); // push value of 4
x = 5; // change x to 5
console.log(array[0]); // array still contains 4 because it's a copy
// object reference pushes a reference
array.push(y); // put object y reference into the array
y.name = "foo"; // change y.name property
console.log(array[1].name); // logs changed value "foo" because it's a reference
// object reference pushes a reference but object can still be referred to even though original variable is no longer within scope
if (true) {
let z = {name: "test", type: "data", data: "2-28-2019"};
array.push(z);
}
console.log(array[2].name); // log shows value "test" since the pointer reference via the array is still within scope
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