angular.service('myService', myServiceFunction); angular.factory('myFactory', myFactoryFunction);
I had trouble wrapping my head around this concept until I put it to myself this way:
Service: the function that you write will be new-ed:
myInjectedService <---- new myServiceFunction()
Factory: the function (constructor) that you write will be invoked:
myInjectedFactory <--- myFactoryFunction()
What you do with that is up to you, but there are some useful patterns…
Such as writing a service function to expose a public API:
function myServiceFunction() { this.awesomeApi = function(optional) { // calculate some stuff return awesomeListOfValues; } } --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Injected in your controller $scope.awesome = myInjectedService.awesomeApi();
Or using a factory function to expose a public API:
function myFactoryFunction() { var aPrivateVariable = "yay"; function hello() { return "hello mars " + aPrivateVariable; } // expose a public API return { hello: hello }; } --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Injected in your controller $scope.hello = myInjectedFactory.hello();
Or using a factory function to return a constructor:
function myFactoryFunction() { return function() { var a = 2; this.a2 = function() { return a*2; }; }; } --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- // Injected in your controller var myShinyNewObject = new myInjectedFactory(); $scope.four = myShinyNewObject.a2();
Which one to use?…
You can accomplish the same thing with both. However, in some cases the factory gives you a little bit more flexibility to create an injectable with a simpler syntax. That’s because while myInjectedService must always be an object, myInjectedFactory can be an object, a function reference, or any value at all. For example, if you wrote a service to create a constructor (as in the last example above), it would have to be instantiated like so:
var myShinyNewObject = new myInjectedService.myFunction()
which is arguably less desirable than this:
var myShinyNewObject = new myInjectedFactory();
(But you should be wary about using this type of pattern in the first place because new-ing objects in your controllers creates hard-to-track dependencies that are difficult to mock for testing. Better to have a service manage a collection of objects for you than use new()
wily-nilly.)
One more thing, they are all Singletons…
Also keep in mind that in both cases, angular is helping you manage a singleton. Regardless of where or how many times you inject your service or function, you will get the same reference to the same object or function. (With the exception of when a factory simply returns a value like a number or string. In that case, you will always get the same value, but not a reference.)