I recall seeing many times on stack overflow the recommendation to delegate angular $http calls to services rather than doing it in controllers. I can see the cleanliness of doing that when one wants the service to modify the response object in some way, before passing it back to the controller.
However, what if there is no need to modify the response? It seems redundant to use a function in the controller to call a service to return a $http request in this case. Is there some other reason I could know about to reserve $http calls for services rather than controllers?
e.g.
// in controller
function potatoChipTime() {
chip = chipService.getAPotatoChip();
}
// in service (inject $q and $http)
var service = {
getAPotatoChip: getAPotatoChip
}
return service;
function getAPotatoChip() {
var deferred = $q.defer();
$http.get(url)
.success(function(response) {
deferred.resolve(response);
)}.error(function(error) {
deferred.reject(error)
});
return deferred.promise;
}
// redundant, no? a lot of fuss to get a potato chip?