Description
Suggestion
✅ Viability Checklist
My suggestion meets these guidelines:
- This wouldn't be a breaking change in existing TypeScript/JavaScript code
- This wouldn't change the runtime behavior of existing JavaScript code
- This could be implemented without emitting different JS based on the types of the expressions
- This isn't a runtime feature (e.g. library functionality, non-ECMAScript syntax with JavaScript output, new syntax sugar for JS, etc.)
- This feature would agree with the rest of TypeScript's Design Goals.
⭐ Suggestion
It would be nice if Object.defineProperty()
and Object.defineProperties()
calls could be read via the constructor to definitely assign class properties.
📃 Motivating Example
class Greeter {
name: string;
greeting: string;
constructor(name: string) {
this.name = name;
Object.defineProperty(this, "greeting", {
get() {
return `hello ${name}`
}
});
}
}
Currently the greeting property in the class will cause the error Property 'greeting' has no initializer and is not definitely assigned in the constructor.
💻 Use Cases
This is not a big deal because we can use a “definite assignment assertion“ (!
) after the greeting property identifier, but it would be nice for TypeScript to be aware of these defineProperty
calls.
🔍 Search Terms
constructor, Object.defineProperty, Object.defineProperties, definitely assigned, strictPropertyInitialization, definite assignment operator
Property has no initializer and is not definitely assigned in the constructor.
This is potentially a duplicate of the following issues:
- Object.defineProperty doesn't define properties on 'this' #28694 The same issue, but focused on JavaScript source files.
- Recognize property with name defined by constant in Object.defineProperty #38115 Might be a duplicate of this issue, but the phrasing of this issue is a little less clear to me based on the examples.
Feel free to close as duplicate!