509

I've built a basic app in Angular, but I have encountered a strange issue where I cannot inject a service into one of my components. It injects fine into any of the three other components I have created, however.

For starters, this is the service:

import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';

@Injectable()
export class MobileService {
  screenWidth: number;
  screenHeight: number;

  constructor() {
    this.screenWidth = window.outerWidth;
    this.screenHeight = window.outerHeight;

    window.addEventListener("resize", this.onWindowResize.bind(this) )
  }
  
  onWindowResize(ev: Event) {
    var win = (ev.currentTarget as Window);
    this.screenWidth = win.outerWidth;
    this.screenHeight = win.outerHeight;
  }
  
}

And the component that it refuses to work with:

import { Component, } from '@angular/core';
import { NgClass } from '@angular/common';
import { ROUTER_DIRECTIVES } from '@angular/router';

import {MobileService} from '../';

@Component({
  moduleId: module.id,
  selector: 'pm-header',
  templateUrl: 'header.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['header.component.css'],
  directives: [ROUTER_DIRECTIVES, NgClass],
})
export class HeaderComponent {
  mobileNav: boolean = false;

  constructor(public ms: MobileService) {
    console.log(ms);
  }

}

The error I get in the browser console is this:

EXCEPTION: Can't resolve all parameters for HeaderComponent: (?).

I have the service in the bootstrap function so it has a provider. And I seem to be able to inject it into the constructor of any of my other components without issue.

8
  • 17
    Maybe the import? Is '../' an index.ts (Barrel)? Can you try to import it from the file where it is declared directly instead? Jun 23, 2016 at 17:11
  • Miraculously that seems to have fixed it! Odd that it wouldn't work using the barrel when the other components I tested the service with did. If you want to post that as an answer instead of comment I'll accept it.
    – Keith Otto
    Jun 23, 2016 at 18:04
  • 17
    Generally a circular dependency.
    – Gary
    Jul 13, 2017 at 17:26
  • I've had this issue with circular dependency as well. Its worth noting that newer versions of web pack are much better at telling you this
    – Enn
    Nov 20, 2017 at 14:56
  • Looks like circular dependency, If you use angular >=4 so you can get rid of intex.ts (barrel) and import all you need directly.
    – Rammgarot
    Aug 28, 2018 at 15:37

49 Answers 49

485

Import it from the file where it is declared directly instead of the barrel.

I don't know what exactly causes the issue but I saw it mentioned several times (probably some kind of circular dependency).

It should also be fixable by changing the order of the exports in the barrel (don't know details, but was mentioned as well)

13
  • 19
    this is correct if you have for example a service injected into another service that first one needs to come first in the barrel.
    – Joao Garin
    Aug 30, 2016 at 14:52
  • 19
    The Angular2 team doesn't recommend barrels anymore because of a lot of such issues. Glad to hear I could help :) Sep 14, 2016 at 8:54
  • 14
    Didn't know that Angular 2 team doesn't recommend barrels. If so, they should note that in the glossary that discusses their benefit. And projects like angular2-webpack-starter should not use them.
    – Blue
    Sep 26, 2016 at 14:36
  • 3
    It seams this was fixed (not an issue in 2.0.2). I find barrels still useful, specially when I need to import several models and services between different modules. This import { cleanValues, getState, FirebaseService, NotificationService, ... } from '../../shared/services'; was a pain when it didn't work (; NgModule is no help with singleton services...
    – Sasxa
    Oct 11, 2016 at 7:13
  • 5
    Argghh I solved it by changing the order of the exports in the barrel (index.ts) file.. thank you so much
    – Spock
    Jan 30, 2018 at 14:30
376

In addition to the previous answers given, it seems this error is thrown as well when your injectable service is missing the actual @Injectable() decorator. So before you debug the cyclic dependency thing and the order of your imports/exports, do a simple check whether your service actually has @Injectable() defined.

This applies to the current Angular latest, Angular 2.1.0.

I opened an issue on this matter.

9
  • Yeah this error is typically because you have forgot to add @Injectable and for instance you may just be importing the Router from '@angular/router' and without that injectable, this error will always happen (as soon as you decide to make one line of code use that injected router. Oct 11, 2017 at 20:35
  • Awesome answer, my issue was that I added a method in my service and didn't add a semi colon after the final brace. I have no idea why it has to be this way yet it's not the case in component classes... for now am only glad to move on!
    – egimaben
    Oct 27, 2017 at 11:03
  • I had a simple model that gave me this error. I used the shortcut where you create your properties in the constructor of the model. The types of the properties was only string and int. Then suddenly this issue started occurring. Adding @Injectable() fixed the issue. Weird because none of my other models has Injectable added. I have to add that I upgraded quite a few libraries before adding this new model. Possibly had something to do with it, but working now. Thanks.
    – Moutono
    May 15, 2018 at 18:03
  • @Moutono Correct. With an empty constructor in your service, the dependency injection doesn't seem to get triggered and @injectable() isn't required. Which is another oddity on itself. For good measure I'd still add it though, simply for when you should ever decide to inject something.
    – J.P.
    May 21, 2018 at 16:10
  • Bear in mind that if your service has a base class that too needs to be decorated with @Injectable()
    – Sam Shiles
    Nov 15, 2018 at 6:55
122

As of Angular 2.2.3 there is now a forwardRef() utility function that allows you to inject providers that have not yet been defined.

By not defined, I mean that the dependency injection map doesn't know the identifier. This is what happens during circular dependencies. You can have circular dependencies in Angular that are very difficult to untangle and see.

export class HeaderComponent {
  mobileNav: boolean = false;

  constructor(@Inject(forwardRef(() => MobileService)) public ms: MobileService) {
    console.log(ms);
  }

}

Adding @Inject(forwardRef(() => MobileService)) to the parameter of the constructor in the original question's source code will fix the problem.

References

Angular 2 Manual: ForwardRef

Forward references in Angular 2

8
  • 3
    forwardRef() was there already in alpha ;-) It's only needed if Mobile service is declared further down in the same file. If the classes are in different files, there is no need for forwardRef() Dec 12, 2016 at 6:27
  • 4
    Günter Zöchbauer, I am still trying to figure out the real problem with my code, but in the meantime forwardRef() did help to get rid of the Can't resolve all parameters for ... message. At least the component is working while I'm looking for a nicer solution to the problem. (And yes, the failing dependency is imported directly from its file)
    – Myk
    Dec 12, 2016 at 10:40
  • 4
    @GünterZöchbauer I've updated my answer with references. I'm not trying to take away from your answer, but this actually solves the problem and people need to know about it. If you google the question there are no results that say to use forwardRef. It's very hard to find. Took me all day yesterday to resolve this problem.
    – Reactgular
    Dec 12, 2016 at 14:26
  • Weird. I posted at least a dozen answers that suggest using foreardRef myself but not anymore after NgModule was introduced. I'm not worried about loosing reps. I'm just curious why you run into this after this didn't pop up anymore since a few months. I'll have a closer look when I'm back home in a few days. Thanks a lot for the feedback. Dec 12, 2016 at 20:26
  • 2
    If someone also got lost about the imports: import { Component, Inject, ForwardRefFn, forwardRef } from '@angular/core';
    – Natanael
    Jan 6, 2017 at 16:53
84

WRONG #1: Forgetting Decorator:

//Uncaught Error: Can't resolve all parameters for MyFooService: (?).
export class MyFooService { ... }

WRONG #2: Omitting "@" Symbol:

//Uncaught Error: Can't resolve all parameters for MyFooService: (?).
Injectable()
export class MyFooService { ... }

WRONG #3: Omitting "()" Symbols:

//Uncaught Error: Can't resolve all parameters for TypeDecorator: (?).
@Injectable
export class MyFooService { ... }

WRONG #4: Lowercase "i":

//Uncaught ReferenceError: injectable is not defined
@injectable
export class MyFooService { ... }

WRONG #5: You forgot: import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';

//Uncaught ReferenceError: Injectable is not defined
@Injectable
export class MyFooService { ... }

CORRECT:

@Injectable()
export class MyFooService { ... }
1
  • but won't this become a singleton? what if I want new instances on each dependency?
    – Tiju John
    Sep 23, 2021 at 18:52
28

As already stated, the issue is caused by the export ordering within the barrel which is caused by circular dependencies.

A more detailed explanation is here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/37907696/893630

1
  • 3
    Ordering didn't solve my problem. Not using the barrel did. Jun 23, 2017 at 9:51
25

I also encountered this by injecting service A into service B and vice versa.

I think it's a good thing that this fails fast as it should probably be avoided anyway. If you want your services to be more modular and re-usable, it's best to avoid circular references as much as possible. This post highlights the pitfalls surrounding that.

Therefore, I have the following recommendations:

  • If you feel the classes are interacting too often (I'm talking about feature envy), you might want to consider merging the 2 services into 1 class.
  • If the above doesn't work for you, consider using a 3rd service, (an EventService) which both services can inject in order to exchange messages.
1
  • 1
    This is definitely what happened to me, and this is the way to go. If you know you have more than one service requiring updates, use an EventService. It's more extensible as you'll no doubt have to tap into those events as you extend the application based on these events. Jan 12, 2017 at 16:53
20

For the benefit of searchers; I got this error. It was simply a missing @ symbol.

I.e. This produces the Can't resolve all parameters for MyHttpService error.

Injectable()
export class MyHttpService{
}

Adding the missing @ symbol fixes it.

@Injectable()
export class MyHttpService{
}
2
  • 2
    In my case, I'd added extra classes and interfaces between @Injectable and the service class definition, so the service class was no longer marked as injectable.
    – Herc
    Apr 25, 2017 at 16:30
  • If you completely forget the @Injectable() decorator on a service class that consumes other injectable services, then your improperly decorated service will also throw this error.
    – I. Buchan
    Nov 1, 2017 at 21:15
17

Another possibility is not having emitDecoratorMetadata set to true in tsconfig.json

{
  "compilerOptions": {

     ...

    "emitDecoratorMetadata": true,

     ...

    }

}
1
  • Can you elaborate on this?
    – tilo
    Jun 8, 2022 at 11:46
16

In my case, I needed to add import "core-js/es7/reflect"; to my application to make @Injectable work.

2
  • 1
    This is now 'core-js/features/reflect'. Also, the polyfill is only needed in JIT (dev) mode, so it can be conditionally loaded using dynamic imports and 'magic comments' in webpack. For example: if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') { import(/* webpackMode: "eager" */ 'core-js/features/reflect').then(() => {});}. See webpack.js.org/api/module-methods/#magic-comments. Dec 4, 2020 at 1:38
  • If you're not sure where to put this, this answer suggests polyfills.ts.
    – ggorlen
    Dec 17, 2023 at 22:59
14

In addition to the missing @Injectable() decorator

Missing @Injectable() decorator in abstract class produced the Can't resolve all parameters for service: (?) The decorator needs be present in MyService as well as in the derived class BaseService

//abstract class
@Injectable()
abstract class BaseService { ... }

//MyService    
@Injectable()
export class MyService extends BaseService {
.....
}
1
  • 1
    This was the case for me. Aug 6, 2020 at 14:34
10

You get this error if you have service A that depends on a static property / method of service B and the service B itself depends on service A trough dependency injection. So it's a kind of a circular dependency, although it isn't since the property / method is static. Probably a bug that occurs in combination with AOT.

2
  • I've also had it when there's a dependency on a function simply defined in the same file. Splitting it into a separate file fixed it.
    – Joe
    Jun 1, 2017 at 11:09
  • 1
    Thank you for mentioning it. I've found myself in the exact situation. I didn't realized that accessing static classes directly can have something to do with the DI. I had this scheme: A -> B and both of them were using the same static class. The solution with forwardRef helps, but I'm going to look how this could be untangled. I will probably try to make a real service out of this static class (this will lead to a better design as well). Jun 29, 2017 at 9:00
10

In my case, it happened because I didn't declare the type for a constructor parameter.

I had something like this:

constructor(private URL, private http: Http) { }

and then changing it to the code below solved my problem.

constructor(private URL : string, private http: Http) {}
8

This answer might be very helpful for this problem. In addition, for my case, exporting the service as default was the cause.

WRONG:

@Inject()
export default class MobileService { ... }

CORRECT:

@Inject()
export class MobileService { ... }
7

for me it was just lack of () in @Injectable. Proper is @Injectable()

1
  • Or in my case accidentally deleting the @
    – TDP
    Jul 30, 2018 at 15:38
6

Removing parameters from injectable constructor() method solved it for my case.

2
  • This was exactly my problem too. I came to post it but found you did first! +1
    – aesede
    Feb 20, 2017 at 14:18
  • then how to send the parameters to reusable service?
    – 3gwebtrain
    Feb 13, 2020 at 11:47
6

In my case it was because of the plugin Augury, disable it will work fine. Alternative option is aot, also works.

all credits to @Boboss74 , he posted the answer here: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/23958

0
4

Well for me the issue was even more annoying, I was using a service within a service and forgot to add it as dependency in the appModule! Hope this helps someone save several hours breaking the app down only to build it back up again

1
  • 2
    I was just missing an @Inject annotation. I was overlooking exactly what the error message says a bit. If you don't suspect circular dependencies, just go to the class mentioned in the error and look at all the constructor parameters and any class members annotated with @Inject and make sure you're doing DI right on all of them. More on DI here: angular.io/docs/ts/latest/guide/dependency-injection.html Jan 30, 2017 at 23:13
4

For me, I got this error when I mistakenly disabled this import in the polyfills.ts file , you need to ensure it is imported to avoid that error.

/** Evergreen browsers require these. **/
// Used for reflect-metadata in JIT. If you use AOT (and only Angular decorators), you can remove.
import 'core-js/es7/reflect';
3
  • Same answer as this.
    – ggorlen
    Dec 17, 2023 at 22:24
  • I probably didn't see that answer when posting and it is similar but not the same - for the linked answer he added the import (in the app, not specifying where exactly in which file) and I disabled it in the polyfills and re-enabled it again for this to work... Dec 17, 2023 at 22:57
  • 1
    I agree, it's useful that you mentioned where to put this.
    – ggorlen
    Dec 17, 2023 at 22:58
4

This can be a really difficult issue to debug due to the lack of feedback in the error. If you are concerned about an actual cyclic dependency, here's the most important thing to look at in the stack trace a) the name of the service b) the constructor parameter in that service that has a question mark e.g. if it looks like this:

can't resolve all parameters for AuthService: ([object Object], [object Object], [object Object], [object Object], ?)

then it means the 5th parameter is a service that also depend on AuthService. i.e. question mark, means it wasn't resolved by DI.

From there, you just need to decouple the 2 services by restructuring the code.

0
4

Adding Injectable solved my problem:

Error code

import { Observable } from 'rxjs';
import { io } from 'socket.io-client';
import { HttpClient } from '@angular/common/http';

export class Chat {

After fix

import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';
import { Observable } from 'rxjs';
import { io } from 'socket.io-client';
import { HttpClient } from '@angular/common/http';

@Injectable()
export class Chat {
3

I have encountered this error by mistyping the service's name, i.e. constructor (private myService: MyService).

For misspelled services, I was able to determine which service was the problem (I had several listed in the constructor) by inspecting the page in Chrome->Console. You will see as part of the message a "parameter" array list by displaying object Object, object Object, ? (or something like that). Notice where the "?" is and that is the position of the service that is causing the problem.

3

You have to add providers array in @Component decorator or in the module where your component is declared. Inside component you can do as below:

@Component({
  moduleId: module.id,
  selector: 'pm-header',
  templateUrl: 'header.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['header.component.css'],
  directives: [ROUTER_DIRECTIVES, NgClass],
  providers: [MobileService]
})
0
3

In my case passing wrong parameters to constructor generates this error, basic idea about this error is that you unknowingly passed some wrong args to any function.

export class ProductComponent {
    productList: Array<Product>;

    constructor(productList:Product) { 
         // productList:Product this arg was causing error of unresolved parameters.
         this.productList = [];
    }
}

I solved this by just removing that argument.

3

In my case I was trying to extend "NativeDateAdapter" in order to override "format(date: Date, displayFormat: Object)" method.

In AngularMaterial-2 DatePicker .

So basically I forgot to add @Injectable anotation.

After I add this to my "CustomDateAdapter" class:

@Injectable({
  providedIn: 'root'
})

Error has gone.

1
  • This worked for me, but I have no idea why. Do both the service and the component which receives it through DI need to be providedIn: root in order for DI to work? Jul 25, 2019 at 15:23
3

In my case it was a circular reference. I had MyService calling Myservice2 And MyService2 calling MyService.

Not good :(

1
  • Same here. Not the most intuitive error for circular dependencies, but at least it fails on buildtime rather than runtime Oct 14, 2022 at 16:49
3

Gotcha!

If none of the above answers helped you, maybe you are importing some element from the same file where a component is injecting the service.

I explain better:

This is the service file:

// your-service-file.ts
import { helloWorld } from 'your-component-file.ts'

@Injectable()
export class CustomService() {
  helloWorld()
}

This is the component file:

@Component({..})
export class CustomComponent {
  constructor(service: CustomService) { }
}

export function helloWorld() {
  console.log('hello world');
}

So it causes problems even if the symbol isn't inside the same component, but just inside the same file. Move the symbol (it can be a function, a constant, a class and so on...) elsewhere and the error will fade away

3

for angular 6 and newer versions, try

@Injectable({
  providedIn: 'root'
})

..right above your service class with no other lines in between

advantages

  • no need to add the service to any module (will be "auto-discovered")
  • service will be a singleton (since it will be injected into root)

[angular docs]

2

Although the ordering of exported classes from within barrels may have been mentioned, the following scenario may also produce the same effect.

Suppose you have classes A, B, and C exported from within the same file where A depends on B and C:

@Injectable()
export class A {
    /** dependencies injected */
    constructor(private b: B, private c: C) {}
}

@Injectable()
export class B {...}

@Injectable()
export class C {...}

Since the dependent classes (i.e. in this case classes B and C) are not yet known to Angular, (probably at run-time during Angular's dependency injection process on class A) the error is raised.

Solution

The solution is to declare and export the dependent classes before the class where the DI is done.

i.e. in the above case the class A is declared right after its dependencies are defined:

@Injectable()
export class B {...}

@Injectable()
export class C {...}

@Injectable()
export class A {
    /** dependencies injected */
    constructor(private b: B, private c: C) {}
}
2

In my case, I was exporting a Class and an Enum from the same component file:

mComponent.component.ts:

export class MyComponentClass{...}
export enum MyEnum{...}

Then, I was trying to use MyEnum from a child of MyComponentClass. That was causing the Can't resolve all parameters error.

By moving MyEnum in a separate folder from MyComponentClass, that solved my issue!

As Günter Zöchbauer mentioned, this is happening because of a service or component is circularly dependent.

2

If your service is defined in the same file as a component (that consumes it) and the service is defined after the component in the file you may get this error. This is due to the same 'forwardRef' issue others have mentioned. At this time VSCode isn't great about showing you this error and the build compiles successfully.

Running the build with --aot can mask this problem due to the way the compiler works (probably related to tree shaking).

Solution: Make sure the service is defined in another file or before the component definition. (I'm not sure if forwardRef can be used in this case, but it seems clumsy to do so).

If I have a very simple service that is very strongly tied to a component (sort of like a view model) - eg. ImageCarouselComponent, I may name it ImageCarouselComponent.service.ts so it doesn't get all mixed up with my other services.

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