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authorIgor Minar2012-01-19 12:39:05 -0800
committerIgor Minar2012-01-19 12:39:05 -0800
commitefe33a5e2196efb45596fb64daaec16dfe1da613 (patch)
tree636582bec1ea38e4c9b2b89431c927ceceb91dbe /src
parent7046d6053de5e409042f45cda7b121da3513f4e6 (diff)
downloadangular.js-efe33a5e2196efb45596fb64daaec16dfe1da613.tar.bz2
docs($http): doc fixes suggested by Gina
Diffstat (limited to 'src')
-rw-r--r--src/service/http.js44
1 files changed, 26 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/src/service/http.js b/src/service/http.js
index 68f06de7..1176bf77 100644
--- a/src/service/http.js
+++ b/src/service/http.js
@@ -144,8 +144,8 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
* @requires $injector
*
* @description
- * The `$http` service is a core Angular service that is responsible for communication with the
- * remote HTTP servers via browser's {@link https://developer.mozilla.org/en/xmlhttprequest
+ * The `$http` service is a core Angular service that facilitates communication with the remote
+ * HTTP servers via browser's {@link https://developer.mozilla.org/en/xmlhttprequest
* XMLHttpRequest} object or via {@link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSONP JSONP}.
*
* For unit testing applications that use `$http` service, see
@@ -154,6 +154,10 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
* For a higher level of abstraction, please check out the {@link angular.module.ng.$resource
* $resource} service.
*
+ * The $http API is based on the {@link angular.module.ng.$q deferred/promise APIs} exposed by
+ * the $q service. While for simple usage patters this doesn't matter much, for advanced usage,
+ * it is important to familiarize yourself with these apis and guarantees they provide.
+ *
*
* # General usage
* The `$http` service is a function which takes a single argument — a configuration object —
@@ -173,9 +177,10 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
* });
* </pre>
*
- * Since the returned value is a Promise object, you can also use the `then` method to register
- * callbacks, and these callbacks will receive a single argument – an object representing the
- * response. See the api signature and type info below for more details.
+ * Since the returned value of calling the $http function is a Promise object, you can also use
+ * the `then` method to register callbacks, and these callbacks will receive a single argument –
+ * an object representing the response. See the api signature and type info below for more
+ * details.
*
*
* # Shortcut methods
@@ -199,7 +204,7 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
* - {@link angular.module.ng.$http#jsonp $http.jsonp}
*
*
- * # HTTP Headers
+ * # Setting HTTP Headers
*
* The $http service will automatically add certain http headers to all requests. These defaults
* can be fully configured by accessing the `$httpProvider.defaults.headers` configuration
@@ -219,7 +224,7 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
* `$httpProvider.defaults.headers.get['My-Header']='value'`.
*
*
- * # Request / Response transformations
+ * # Transforming Requests and Responses
*
* Both requests and responses can be transformed using transform functions. By default, Angular
* applies these transformations:
@@ -234,16 +239,16 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
* - if XSRF prefix is detected, strip it (see Security Considerations section below)
* - if json response is detected, deserialize it using a JSON parser
*
- * These transformations can be overridden locally by specifying transform functions as
- * `transformRequest` and/or `transformResponse` properties of the config object. To globally
- * override the default transforms, override the `$httpProvider.defaults.transformRequest` and
+ * To override these transformation locally, specify transform functions as `transformRequest`
+ * and/or `transformResponse` properties of the config object. To globally override the default
+ * transforms, override the `$httpProvider.defaults.transformRequest` and
* `$httpProvider.defaults.transformResponse` properties of the `$httpProvider`.
*
*
* # Caching
*
- * You can enable caching by setting the configuration property `cache` to `true`. When the
- * cache is enabled, `$http` stores the response from the server in local cache. Next time the
+ * To enable caching set the configuration property `cache` to `true`. When the cache is
+ * enabled, `$http` stores the response from the server in local cache. Next time the
* response is served from the cache without sending a request to the server.
*
* Note that even if the response is served from cache, delivery of the data is asynchronous in
@@ -256,6 +261,9 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
*
* # Response interceptors
*
+ * Before you start creating interceptors, be sure to understand the
+ * {@link angular.module.ng.$q $q and deferred/promise APIs}.
+ *
* For purposes of global error handling, authentication or any kind of synchronous or
* asynchronous preprocessing of received responses, it is desirable to be able to intercept
* responses for http requests before they are handed over to the application code that
@@ -267,9 +275,6 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
* injected with dependencies (if specified) and returns the interceptor — a function that
* takes a {@link angular.module.ng.$q promise} and returns the original or a new promise.
*
- * Before you start creating interceptors, be sure to understand the
- * {@link angular.module.ng.$q $q and deferred/promise APIs}.
- *
* <pre>
* // register the interceptor as a service
* $provide.factory('myHttpInterceptor', function($q, dependency1, dependency2) {
@@ -300,9 +305,12 @@ function $HttpProvider() {
*
* # Security Considerations
*
- * When designing web applications your design needs to consider security threats from
- * {@link http://haacked.com/archive/2008/11/20/anatomy-of-a-subtle-json-vulnerability.aspx
- * JSON Vulnerability} and {@link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery XSRF}.
+ * When designing web applications, consider security threats from:
+ *
+ * - {@link http://haacked.com/archive/2008/11/20/anatomy-of-a-subtle-json-vulnerability.aspx
+ * JSON Vulnerability}
+ * - {@link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery XSRF}
+ *
* Both server and the client must cooperate in order to eliminate these threats. Angular comes
* pre-configured with strategies that address these issues, but for this to work backend server
* cooperation is required.