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I have created a factory/service in my angular app.

I want to debug it in the browser. Is there a way that I can access its instance and check what is the value of its functions and variables.

The angular scope can be accessed using

angular.element(e).scope()

Is there a similar way to access factories ?

5 Answers 5

67

I believe you can use something like this:

angular.element(e).injector().get('serviceName')

And since angularjs services are singletons, doing this on any angular.element will always return the same service instance/object.

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  • 4
    +1 This is great. Debugging becomes a lot easier with this. Adding a link to the angular documentation will improve the utility even further. ref: docs.angularjs.org/api/angular.element
    – rubish
    Mar 13, 2013 at 17:33
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    Is this still valid? It was working fine before. But now it says ReferenceError: e is not defined
    – Ivan Wang
    Oct 17, 2014 at 1:36
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    @IvanWang yes, it's still valid. Just tested and it's working. Are you sure the e variable is defined and accessible? (could it be a problem like this?)
    – bmleite
    Oct 17, 2014 at 8:51
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    @bmleite That could be the reason. Would you please tell me how to define e in AngularJs?
    – Ivan Wang
    Oct 20, 2014 at 23:40
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    In Chrome, you can select an element in the elements tab and reference it with $0. So you could select your main controller element, use angular.element($0).injector().get('serviceName')
    – Geoff
    May 25, 2016 at 18:38
8

Inject your service into any controller and then console.log(myService);

Fiddle.

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6

Like @bmleite said, you can use:

angular.element( {DOM element} ).injector().get('serviceName')

You can select the wanted DOM element (use 'Elements' tab on Chrome Developper Tools or 'HTML' tab on Firefox/Firebug) and then use $0 to point on it in the 'Console' tab.

The simplest element to select is the one you have your ngApp directive on it. The final code is:

var myService = angular.element($0).injector().get('serviceName');

Then you have access to all his variables and functions:

myService.getConfig('dev');
4

Try ng-inspect chrome extension.

$get('serviceName') in console will return the service or factory instance.

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    ng-inspect is much higher rated than Angular Batarang Apr 5, 2017 at 1:12
3

I'm not certain about how it inspects services as such, but Angular Batarang is a great Chrome extension for debugging Angular apps. Might be helpful.

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/angularjs-batarang/ighdmehidhipcmcojjgiloacoafjmpfk

Useful documentation for Batarang:

http://www.c-sharpcorner.com/UploadFile/9c2805/getting-started-with-angularjs-batarang/

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