I am using angularjs, underscore and jQuery in my new service:
myModule.factory('MyService', ['MyResource', function (MyResource) {
....
// Here I make use of _ and $
}]);
How can I inject underscore or jQuery to the new service so I can be sure that _ is underscore and $ is jquery?
I am looking for something like:
myModule.factory('MyService', [ 'underscore', 'jquery','MyResource', function (_, $, MyResource) {
....
// Here I want to use $ and _ and be SURE that _ is underscore and $ is jquery
}]);
based on @moderndegree's approach I have implemented the following code, I cannot say it is perfect but this way tester would know if it has jQuery dependency as $window
is too generic object to inject.
'use strict';
(function () {
var app= angular.module('app');
//these are just references the instance of related lib so we can inject them to the controllers/services in an angular way.
app.factory('jQuery', [
'$window',
function ($window) {
return $window.jQuery;
}
]);
app.factory('Modernizr', [
'$window',
function ($window) {
return $window.Modernizr;
}
]);
app.factory('Highcharts', [
'$window',
function ($window) {
return $window.Highcharts;
}
]);
})();
If you include jQuery and Underscore in your HTML, they will be globally available. There is no need to "inject" them.
<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.10.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="//documentcloud.github.io/underscore/underscore-min.js"></script>
If you wanted to include them in a module, you could do something like this:
angular.module('myApp', []).
service('vendorService', ['$q', '$timeout', '$window', function($q, $timeout, $window){
var deferred = $q.defer(), libs = {};
$script([
'//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.10.1/jquery.min.js',
'//documentcloud.github.io/underscore/underscore-min.js'
], 'vendorBundle');
$script.ready('vendorBundle', function() {
libs.$ = $window.jQuery.noConflict();
libs._ = $window._.noConflict();
$timeout(function(){
deferred.resolve(libs);
}, 0);
});
this.getLibs = function(){
return deferred.promise;
}
}]).
controller('myController', ['$scope', 'vendorService', function($scope, vendorService){
vendorService.getLibs().then(function(libs){
$scope.jQueryVersion = libs.$.fn.jquery;
$scope._ = libs._;
});
}]);
Doing this will allow you to load the libraries asynchronously while keeping them from conflicting with previously loaded versions. There may be a better way to store references to the loaded libraries but this should work just fine.
Also, this example relies on a third party laoder ($script.js).
And here is a jsFiddle (http://jsfiddle.net/moderndegree/bzXGx/);
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