In-depth Guides
Dependency Injection

Understanding dependency injection

Dependency injection, or DI, is one of the fundamental concepts in Angular. DI is wired into the Angular framework and allows classes with Angular decorators, such as Components, Directives, Pipes, and Injectables, to configure dependencies that they need.

Two main roles exist in the DI system: dependency consumer and dependency provider.

Angular facilitates the interaction between dependency consumers and dependency providers using an abstraction called Injector. When a dependency is requested, the injector checks its registry to see if there is an instance already available there. If not, a new instance is created and stored in the registry. Angular creates an application-wide injector (also known as the "root" injector) during the application bootstrap process. In most cases you don't need to manually create injectors, but you should know that there is a layer that connects providers and consumers.

This topic covers basic scenarios of how a class can act as a dependency. Angular also allows you to use functions, objects, primitive types such as string or Boolean, or any other types as dependencies. For more information, see Dependency providers.

Providing a dependency

Consider a class called HeroService that needs to act as a dependency in a component.

The first step is to add the @Injectable decorator to show that the class can be injected.

      
@Injectable()class HeroService {}

The next step is to make it available in the DI by providing it. A dependency can be provided in multiple places:

Preferred: At the application root level using providedIn

Providing a service at the application root level using providedIn allows injecting the service into all other classes. Using providedIn enables Angular and JavaScript code optimizers to effectively remove services that are unused (known as tree-shaking).

You can provide a service by using providedIn: 'root' in the @Injectable decorator:

      
@Injectable({  providedIn: 'root'})class HeroService {}

When you provide the service at the root level, Angular creates a single, shared instance of the HeroService and injects it into any class that asks for it.

At the Component level

You can provide services at @Component level by using the providers field of the @Component decorator. In this case the HeroService becomes available to all instances of this component and other components and directives used in the template.

For example:

      
@Component({  standalone: true,  selector: 'hero-list',  template: '...',  providers: [HeroService]})class HeroListComponent {}

When you register a provider at the component level, you get a new instance of the service with each new instance of that component.

Note: Declaring a service like this causes HeroService to always be included in your application— even if the service is unused.

At the application root level using ApplicationConfig

You can use the providers field of the ApplicationConfig (passed to the bootstrapApplication function) to provide a service or other Injectable at the application level.

In the example below, the HeroService is available to all components, directives, and pipes:

      
export const appConfig: ApplicationConfig = {    providers: [      { provide: HeroService },    ]};

Then, in main.ts:

      
bootstrapApplication(AppComponent, appConfig)

Note: Declaring a service like this causes HeroService to always be included in your application— even if the service is unused.

NgModule based applications

@NgModule-based applications use the providers field of the @NgModule decorator to provide a service or other Injectable available at the application level.

A service provided in a module is available to all declarations of the module, or to any other modules which share the same ModuleInjector. To understand all edge-cases, see Hierarchical injectors.

Note: Declaring a service using providers causes the service to be included in your application— even if the service is unused.

Injecting/consuming a dependency

The most common way to inject a dependency is to declare it in a class constructor. When Angular creates a new instance of a component, directive, or pipe class, it determines which services or other dependencies that class needs by looking at the constructor parameter types. For example, if the HeroListComponent needs the HeroService, the constructor can look like this:

      
@Component({ … })class HeroListComponent {  constructor(private service: HeroService) {}}

Another option is to use the inject method:

      
@Component({ … })class HeroListComponent {  private service = inject(HeroService);}

When Angular discovers that a component depends on a service, it first checks if the injector has any existing instances of that service. If a requested service instance doesn't yet exist, the injector creates one using the registered provider, and adds it to the injector before returning the service to Angular.

When all requested services have been resolved and returned, Angular can call the component's constructor with those services as arguments.

Injector

Service A

HeroService

Service C

Service D

Component\nconstructor(HeroService)

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