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angularjs - $provide outside config blocks

I'm certainly missing some fundamental point about the injector, but I fail to understand why exactly this

angular.module('app').config(function ($provide) {
    ...
});

and this

angular.module('app').config(function ($injector) {
    $injector.invoke(function ($provide) { ... });
});

work as intended, while this

app.run(function($provide) {
    ...
});

will throw

Error: [$injector:unpr] Unknown provider: $provideProvider <- $provide

As follows from the above, config has some special relationship with providers, while run deals with instances, yet I'm unsure about the thing that makes config blocks so special.

As a consequence of that, is there no way to get to $provide outside config blocks, e.g. with angular.injector() (though it seems that it gets provider instances also)?

The question, besides mere curiosity, also has some practical considerations. In 1.4 all of $provide functions are exposed to module, but that's not true for 1.3.

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1 Answer

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The purpose of the config() function is to allow you to perform some global configuration that will affect the entire application - that includes services, directives, controllers, etc. Because of that, the config() block must run before anything else. But, you still need a way to perform the aforementioned configuration and make it available to the rest of the app. And the way to do that is by using providers.

What makes providers "special" is that they have two initialization parts, and one of them is directly related to the config() block. Take a look at the following code:

app.provider('myService', function() {
    var self = {};    
    this.setSomeGlobalProperty = function(value) {
        self.someGlobalProperty = value;
    };

    this.$get = function(someDependency) {
        this.doSomething = function() {
            console.log(self.someGlobalProperty);
        };
    };    
});

app.config(function(myServiceProvider) {
    myServiceProvider.setSomeGlobalProperty('foobar');
});

app.controller('MyCtrl', function(myService) {
    myService.doSomething();
});

When you inject a provider into the config() function, you can access anything but the $get function (technically you can access the $get function, but calling it won't work). That way you can do whatever configuration you might need to do. That's the first initialization part. It's worth mentioning that even though our service is called myService, you need to use the suffix Provider here.

But when you inject the same provider into any other place, Angular calls the $get() function and injects whatever it returns. That's the second initialization part. In this case, the provider behaves just like an ordinary service.

Now about $provide and $injector. Since they are "configuration services", it makes sense to me that you can't access them outside the config() block. If you could, then you would be able to, say, create a factory after it had been used by another service.

Finally, I haven't played with v1.4 yet, so I have no idea why that behavior apparently has changed. If anyone knows why, please let me know and I'll update my answer.


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