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| author | Pepper Lebeck-Jobe | 2011-03-20 21:49:06 -0700 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Igor Minar | 2011-03-28 23:40:56 -0700 | 
| commit | 4da65d0e8c6a3bfbe5b2c4ad5708a39e750f739a (patch) | |
| tree | c2b91e8f0c6435fa592302fa75b748865b23506c | |
| parent | e1d122a4b7ba837997cd258939daf82310adc223 (diff) | |
| download | angular.js-4da65d0e8c6a3bfbe5b2c4ad5708a39e750f739a.tar.bz2 | |
Fixes some links and types in the DI docs.
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/guide.di.ngdoc | 12 | 
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/docs/guide.di.ngdoc b/docs/guide.di.ngdoc index 7c89c578..2d1f92eb 100644 --- a/docs/guide.di.ngdoc +++ b/docs/guide.di.ngdoc @@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ for isolation reasons. We get this isolation by having each test create its own  <pre>  // crate a root scope  var rootScope = angular.scope(); -// accesss the service loctor +// accesss the service locator  var myService = rootScope.$service('myService');  </pre> @@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ MyController.$inject = ['$route'];  </pre>  In this example, the `MyController` constructor function takes one argument, the -(@link angular.service.$route $route) service. Angular is then responsible for supplying the +{@link angular.service.$route $route} service. Angular is then responsible for supplying the  instance of `$route` to the controller when the constructor is instantiated. There are two ways to  cause controller instantiation – by configuring routes with the $route service or by referencing the  controller from the HTML template, such as: @@ -260,8 +260,8 @@ rootScope.$service(greet, fnThis, 'world');  # Inferring `$inject` -** EXPERIMENTAL: this is an experimental feature, see the important note at the end of this section -for drawbacks. ** +**EXPERIMENTAL: this is an experimental feature, see the important note at the end of this section +for drawbacks.**  We resort to `$inject` and our own annotation because there is no way in JavaScript to get a list of  arguments. Or is there? It turns out that calling `.toString()` on a function returns the function @@ -286,7 +286,7 @@ fnA.$inject = ['$window', 'serviceA'];  // inject '$window', 'serviceA', curry 'name';  function fnB($window, serviceA_, name){}; -// implies: fnA.$inject = ['$window', 'serviceA']; +// implies: fnB.$inject = ['$window', 'serviceA'];  </pre>  If angular does not find an `$inject` annotation on the function, then it calls the `.toString()` @@ -301,4 +301,4 @@ and tries to infer what should be injected using the following rules:  Minifiers/obfuscators change the names of function arguments and will therefore break the `$inject`  inference. For this reason, either explicitly declare the `$inject` or do not use  minifiers/obfuscators. In the future, we may provide a pre-processor which will scan the source code -and insert the `$inject` into the source code so that it can be minified/obfuscated.
\ No newline at end of file +and insert the `$inject` into the source code so that it can be minified/obfuscated.  | 
