AngularJS provides a set of components that can be injected in the form of dependencies such as factory, value, constant, service, and provider.
The @Injectable() decorator specifies that Angular can use this class in the DI system. The metadata, providedIn: 'root' , means that the HeroService is visible throughout the application.
$injector is used to retrieve object instances as defined by provider, instantiate types, invoke methods, and load modules.
Note that you cannot inject "providers" into run blocks. The config method accepts a function, which can be injected with "providers" and "constants" as dependencies. Note that you cannot inject "services" or "values" into configuration. The provider method can only be injected with other "providers".
Rather that just fill in the table with "yes" and "no" with no explanation, I'll go into a little bit more detail.
[Note, added after finishing: this ended up being... quite a bit longer than I expected. There's a tl;dr at the bottom, but I hope this proves informational.]
[This answer has also been added to the AngularJS wiki: Understanding Dependency Injection]
$provide
)The $provide
service is responsible for telling Angular how to create new injectable things; these things are called services. Services are defined by things called providers, which is what you're creating when you use $provide
. Defining a provider is done via the provider
method on the $provide
service, and you can get hold of the $provide
service by asking for it to be injected into an application's config
function. An example might be something like this:
app.config(function($provide) {
$provide.provider('greeting', function() {
this.$get = function() {
return function(name) {
alert("Hello, " + name);
};
};
});
});
Here we've defined a new provider for a service called greeting
; we can inject a variable named greeting
into any injectable function (like controllers, more on that later) and Angular will call the provider's $get
function in order to return a new instance of the service. In this case, the thing that will be injected is a function that takes a name
parameter and alert
s a message based on the name. We might use it like this:
app.controller('MainController', function($scope, greeting) {
$scope.onClick = function() {
greeting('Ford Prefect');
};
});
Now here's the trick. factory
, service
, and value
are all just shortcuts to define various parts of a provider--that is, they provide a means of defining a provider without having to type all that stuff out. For example, you could write that exact same provider just like this:
app.config(function($provide) {
$provide.factory('greeting', function() {
return function(name) {
alert("Hello, " + name);
};
});
});
It's important to understand, so I'll rephrase: under the hood, AngularJS is calling the exact same code that we wrote above (the $provide.provider
version) for us. There is literally, 100% no difference in the two versions. value
works just the same way--if whatever we would return from our $get
function (aka our factory
function) is always exactly the same, we can write even less code using value
. For example, since we always return the same function for our greeting
service, we can use value
to define it, too:
app.config(function($provide) {
$provide.value('greeting', function(name) {
alert("Hello, " + name);
});
});
Again, this is 100% identical to the other two methods we've used to define this function--it's just a way to save some typing.
Now you probably noticed this annoying app.config(function($provide) { ... })
thing I've been using. Since defining new providers (via any of the given methods above) is so common, AngularJS exposes the $provider
methods directly on the module object, to save even more typing:
var myMod = angular.module('myModule', []);
myMod.provider("greeting", ...);
myMod.factory("greeting", ...);
myMod.value("greeting", ...);
These all do the same thing as the more verbose app.config(...)
versions we used previously.
The one injectable I've skipped so far is constant
. For now, it's easy enough to say that it works just like value
. We'll see there's one difference later.
To review, all these pieces of code are doing the exact same thing:
myMod.provider('greeting', function() {
this.$get = function() {
return function(name) {
alert("Hello, " + name);
};
};
});
myMod.factory('greeting', function() {
return function(name) {
alert("Hello, " + name);
};
});
myMod.value('greeting', function(name) {
alert("Hello, " + name);
});
$injector
)The injector is responsible for actually creating instances of our services using the code we provided via $provide
(no pun intended). Any time you write a function that takes injected arguments, you're seeing the injector at work. Each AngularJS application has a single $injector
that gets created when the application first starts; you can get a hold of it by injecting $injector
into any injectable function (yes, $injector
knows how to inject itself!)
Once you have $injector
, you can get an instance of a defined service by calling get
on it with the name of the service. For example,
var greeting = $injector.get('greeting');
greeting('Ford Prefect');
The injector is also responsible for injecting services into functions; for example, you can magically inject services into any function you have using the injector's invoke
method;
var myFunction = function(greeting) {
greeting('Ford Prefect');
};
$injector.invoke(myFunction);
Its worth noting that the injector will only create an instance of a service once. It then caches whatever the provider returns by the service's name; the next time you ask for the service, you'll actually get the exact same object.
So, to answer your question, you can inject services into any function that is called with $injector.invoke
. This includes
$get
methods of providers (aka the factory
definition functions)Since constant
s and value
s always return a static value, they are not invoked via the injector, and thus you cannot inject them with anything.
You may be wondering why anyone would bother to set up a full-fledged provider with the provide
method if factory
, value
, etc. are so much easier. The answer is that providers allow a lot of configuration. We've already mentioned that when you create a service via the provider (or any of the shortcuts Angular gives you), you create a new provider that defines how that service is constructed. What I didn't mention is that these providers can be injected into config
sections of your application so you can interact with them!
First, Angular runs your application in two-phases--the config
and run
phases. The config
phase, as we've seen, is where you can set up any providers as necessary. This is also where directives, controllers, filters, and the like get set up. The run
phase, as you might guess, is where Angular actually compiles your DOM and starts up your app.
You can add additional code to be run in these phases with the myMod.config
and myMod.run
functions--each take a function to run during that specific phase. As we saw in the first section, these functions are injectable--we injected the built-in $provide
service in our very first code sample. However, what's worth noting is that during the config
phase, only providers can be injected (with the exception of the services in the AUTO
module--$provide
and $injector
).
For example, the following is not allowed:
myMod.config(function(greeting) {
// WON'T WORK -- greeting is an *instance* of a service.
// Only providers for services can be injected in config blocks.
});
What you do have access to are any providers for services you've made:
myMod.config(function(greetingProvider) {
// a-ok!
});
There is one important exception: constant
s, since they cannot be changed, are allowed to be injected inside config
blocks (this is how they differ from value
s). They are accessed by their name alone (no Provider
suffix necessary).
Whenever you defined a provider for a service, that provider gets named serviceProvider
, where service
is the name of the service. Now we can use the power of providers do do some more complicated stuff!
myMod.provider('greeting', function() {
var text = 'Hello, ';
this.setText = function(value) {
text = value;
};
this.$get = function() {
return function(name) {
alert(text + name);
};
};
});
myMod.config(function(greetingProvider) {
greetingProvider.setText("Howdy there, ");
});
myMod.run(function(greeting) {
greeting('Ford Prefect');
});
Now we have a function on our provider called setText
that we can use to customize our alert
; we can get access to this provider in a config
block to call this method and customize the service. When we finally run our app, we can grab the greeting
service, and try it out to see that our customization took effect.
Since this is a more complex example, here's a working demonstration: http://jsfiddle.net/BinaryMuse/9GjYg/
$controller
)Controller functions can be injected into, but controllers themselves can't be injected into other things. That's because controllers aren't created via the provider. Instead, there is a built-in Angular service called $controller
that is responsible for setting up your controllers. When you call myMod.controller(...)
, you're actually accessing this service's provider, just like in the last section.
For example, when you define a controller like this:
myMod.controller('MainController', function($scope) {
// ...
});
What you're actually doing is this:
myMod.config(function($controllerProvider) {
$controllerProvider.register('MainController', function($scope) {
// ...
});
});
Later, when Angular needs to create an instance of your controller, it uses the $controller
service (which in turn uses the $injector
to invoke your controller function so it gets its dependencies injected too).
filter
and directive
work exactly the same way as controller
; filter
uses a service called $filter
and its provider $filterProvider
, while directive
uses a service called $compile
and its provider $compileProvider
. Some links:
As per the other examples, myMod.filter
and myMod.directive
are shortcuts to configuring these services.
So, to summarize, any function that gets called with $injector.invoke
can be injected into. This includes, from your chart (but is not limited to):
$get
(when defining provider as an object)The provider creates new services that can be injected into things. This includes:
That said, built-in services like $controller
and $filter
can be injected, and you can use those service to get hold of the new filters and controllers you defined with those methods (even though the things you defined aren't, by themselves, able to be injected into things).
Other than that, any injector-invoked function can be injected with any provider-provided service--there is no restriction (other than the config
and run
differences listed herein).
The point that BinaryMuse makes in her amazing answer about providers, factories, and services all being the same thing extremely important.
Below is an image that I think can visually illustrate her point:
(source: simplygoodcode.com)
Great answer by Michelle. I just want to point out that directives can be injected. If you have a directive named myThing
, you can inject it with myThingDirective
: Here is a contrived example.
The above example is not very practical, however the ability to inject a directive is useful when you want to decorate that directive.
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