What are the differences between the private keyword and private fields in TypeScript?

Private keyword

The private keyword in TypeScript is a compile time annotation. It tells the compiler that a property should only be accessible inside that class:

class PrivateKeywordClass {
    private value = 1;
}

const obj = new PrivateKeywordClass();
obj.value // compiler error: Property 'value' is private and only accessible within class 'PrivateKeywordClass'.

However compile time checking can be easily bypassed, for example by casting away the type information:

const obj = new PrivateKeywordClass();
(obj as any).value // no compile error

The private keyword is also not enforced at runtime

Emitted JavaScript

When compiling TypeScript to JavaScript, the private keyword is simply removed:

class PrivateKeywordClass {
    private value = 1;
}

Becomes:

class PrivateKeywordClass {
    constructor() {
        this.value = 1;
    }
}

From this, you can see why the private keyword does not offer any runtime protection: in the generated JavaScript it’s just a normal JavaScript property.

Private fields

Private fields ensure that properties are kept private at runtime:

class PrivateFieldClass {
    #value = 1;

    getValue() { return this.#value; }
}

const obj = new PrivateFieldClass();

// You can't access '#value' outside of class like this
obj.value === undefined // This is not the field you are looking for.
obj.getValue() === 1 // But the class itself can access the private field!

// Meanwhile, using a private field outside a class is a runtime syntax error:
obj.#value

// While trying to access the private fields of another class is 
// a runtime type error:
class Other {
    #value;

    getValue(obj) {
        return obj.#value // TypeError: Read of private field #value from an object which did not contain the field
    }
}

new Other().getValue(new PrivateKeywordClass());

TypeScript will also output a compile time error if you try using a private field outside of a class:

Error on accessing a private field

Private fields originates from a TC-39 ECMAScript proposal and are part of the 2021 ECMAScript specification, which means that they can be used in both normal JavaScript and TypeScript.

Emitted JavaScript

If you use private fields in TypeScript and are targeting ES2021 or older versions of JavaScript for your output, TypeScript will generate code that emulates the runtime behavior of private fields using WeakMap (source)

class PrivateFieldClass {
    constructor() {
        _x.set(this, 1);
    }
}
_x = new WeakMap();

If you are targeting anything later than ES2021, TypeScript will emit the private field:

class PrivateFieldClass {
    constructor() {
        this.#x = 1;
    }
    #x;
}

Which one should I use?

It depends on what you are trying to achieve.

The private keyword is a fine default. It accomplishes what it was designed to accomplish and has been used successfully by TypeScript developers for years. And if you have an existing codebase, you do not need to switch all of your code to use private fields. This is especially true if you are not targeting esnext, as the JS that TS emits for private fields may have a performance impact. Also keep in mind that private fields have other subtle but important differences from the private keyword

However if you need to enforce runtime privateness or are outputting esnext JavaScript, than you should use private fields.

Also keep in mind that organization/community conventions on using one or the other will also evolve as private fields become more widespread within the JavaScript/TypeScript ecosystems

Other differences of note

  • Private fields are not returned by Object.getOwnPropertyNames and similar methods

  • Private fields are not serialized by JSON.stringify

  • There are importance edge cases around inheritance.

    TypeScript for example forbids declaring a private property in a subclass with the same name as a private property in the superclass.

    class Base {
        private value = 1;
    }
    
    class Sub extends Base {
        private value = 2; // Compile error:
    }
    

    This is not true with private fields:

    class Base {
        #value = 1;
    }
    
    class Sub extends Base {
        #value = 2; // Not an error
    }
    
  • A private keyword private property without an initializer will not generate a property declaration in the emitted JavaScript:

    class PrivateKeywordClass {
        private value?: string;
        getValue() { return this.value; }
    }
    

    Compiles to:

    class PrivateKeywordClass {
        getValue() { return this.value; }
    }
    

    Whereas private fields always generate a property declaration:

    class PrivateKeywordClass {
        #value?: string;
        getValue() { return this.#value; }
    }
    

    Compiles to (when targetting esnext):

    class PrivateKeywordClass {
        #value;
        getValue() { return this.#value; }
    }
    

Further reading:

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