We are in the process of upgrading an AngularJS project to Angular 7. We are following the suggested "hybrid" approach where both frameworks run side by side. We are running into some change detection issues with native promises. Essentially an AngularJS (Service A) service is using a "downgraded" Angular 7 service (Service B). Prior to the migration all of ServiceB's method returned $q's defer.promise. However, now that Service B is an Angular 7 service we return regular Promises, but that is not playing nicely with Change Detection.
I tried wrapping SerivceB's call in a $q promise and I see it is working fine now. However, that is not a feasible solution since ServiceA will be upgraded to an Angular 7 service down the road.
Current code
ServiceA.get = function(order) {
//do some work
//ServiceB is the downgraded Angular 7 service
//now returns a native promise
return ServiceB.getOrders(order)
}
ServiceA.processBatch = function(order,observer) {
ServiceA.get(order)
.then(function(resolve) {
//should trigger the UI update in the Controller (still Angular JS)
observer.onComplete(resolve)
})
.catch(function(err) {
observer.onError(err)
})
}
Now it gets interesting when I wrap the ServiceB getOrders call in $qs defer, because then the UI will update
ServiceA.get = function(order) {
//do some work
//ServiceB is the downgraded Angular 7 service
//now returns a native promise
var defer = $q.defer()
ServiceB.getOrders(order)
.then(function(resolve) { defer.resolve(resolve)})
.catch(function(err) { defer.reject(err);});
return defer.promise;
}
I'd expect there to be no difference, but when inspecting the callstack I see that the regular promise resolve runs within the zone, but when using $q i see that a $digest is followed.
I do not understand why this is the case. This is an oversimplyfied example of the code. In reality there is more going on which is why I am not able to return a promise from processBatch