Underscore prefix for property and method names in JavaScript
That's only a convention. The Javascript language does not give any special meaning to identifiers starting with underscore characters.
That said, it's quite a useful convention for a language that doesn't support encapsulation out of the box. Although there is no way to prevent someone from abusing your classes' implementations, at least it does clarify your intent, and documents such behavior as being wrong in the first place.
JavaScript actually does support encapsulation, through a method that involves hiding members in closures (Crockford). That said, it's sometimes cumbersome, and the underscore convention is a pretty good convention to use for things that are sort of private, but that you don't actually need to hide.
Welcome to 2019!
It appears a proposal to extend class syntax to allow for #
prefixed variable to be private was accepted. Chrome 74 ships with this support.
_
prefixed variable names are considered private by convention but are still public.
This syntax tries to be both terse and intuitive, although it's rather different from other programming languages.
Why was the sigil # chosen, among all the Unicode code points?
- @ was the initial favorite, but it was taken by decorators. TC39 considered swapping decorators and private state sigils, but the committee decided to defer to the existing usage of transpiler users.
- _ would cause compatibility issues with existing JavaScript code, which has allowed _ at the start of an identifier or (public) property name for a long time.
This proposal reached Stage 3 in July 2017. Since that time, there has been extensive thought and lengthy discussion about various alternatives. In the end, this thought process and continued community engagement led to renewed consensus on the proposal in this repository. Based on that consensus, implementations are moving forward on this proposal.
See https://caniuse.com/#feat=mdn-javascript_classes_private_class_fields