@ngdoc overview @name Developer Guide: Angular Services: Understanding Angular Services @description ## What are Angular Services? Angular services are singletons objects or functions that carry out specific tasks common to web apps. Angular has a number of built in services, such as the {@link api/ng.$http $http service}, which provides access to the browser's `XMLHttpRequest` object for making requests to a server. Like other core Angular variables and identifiers, the built-in services always start with `$` (such as `$http` mentioned above). You can also create your own custom services. ## Using a Service To use an Angular service, you identify it as a dependency for the component (controller, service, filter or directive) that depends on the service. Angular's dependency injection subsystem takes care of the rest. The Angular injector subsystem is in charge of service instantiation, resolution of dependencies, and provision of dependencies to components as requested. Angular injects dependencies using ["constructor" injection](http://misko.hevery.com/2009/02/19/constructor-injection-vs-setter-injection/). The dependency is passed to the component's factory/constructor function. Because JavaScript is a dynamically typed language, Angular's dependency injection subsystem cannot use static types to identify service dependencies. For this reason a component must, explicitly, define its dependencies by using one of the {@link di injection annotation} methods. For example, by providing a `$inject` property: var MyController = function($location) { ... }; MyController.$inject = ['$location']; myModule.controller('MyController', MyController); Or by providing an "inline" injection annotation: var myService = function($http) { ... }; myModule.factory('myService', ['$http', myService]); ## Defining a Service Application developers are free to define their own services by registering their name, and **service factory function**, in Angular modules. The purpose of the **service factory function** is to generate the single object, or function, that represents the service to the rest of the application. That object, or function, will then be injected into any component (controller, service, filter or directive) that specifies a dependency on the service. Angular factory functions are executed lazily. That is, they are only executed when needed to satisfy a dependency, and are then executed exactly once for each service. Everything that is dependent on this service gets a reference to the single instance generated by the service factory. ## Related Topics * {@link di About Angular Dependency Injection} * {@link dev_guide.services.creating_services Creating Angular Services} * {@link dev_guide.services.managing_dependencies Managing Service Dependencies} * {@link dev_guide.services.testing_services Testing Angular Services} ## Related API * {@link api/ng Angular Service API} * {@link api/angular.injector Injector API}