I have a service called 'player' and I need to update the service when a flash object is finished loading.
mySongPlayer.factory('player', function() {
var isPlayerLoaded = false;
var playerHolder = '';
window.playerReady = function(thePlayer) {
playerHolder = window.document[thePlayer.id];
addListeners();
isPlayerLoaded = true;
}
var flashvars = {
file:"",
autostart:"true",
skin: "/skins/glow/glow.zip",
}
var params = {
allowfullscreen:"false",
allowscriptaccess:"always"
}
var attributes = {
id:"player1",
name:"player1"
}
swfobject.embedSWF("/player.swf", "player_placeholder", "100%", "40", "9.0.115", false, flashvars, params, attributes);
var playObj;
return playObj || (playObj = {
currentId: 'test', currentUrl: 'url', playerHolder: ''
});
});
I know how to access the service using
angular.element(DOMElement).injector().get('player')
but it returns a new instance of 'player' while I need to update the instance already created in the module. Is there a way to do this? I only want one instance of the player, but I need to initialize it from outside javascript.
Well, I can't really see all of what you're doing, but you're probably about 1/2 way there.
Here is a working plunk of what I'm about to describe
injector.get()
should be returning the same instance of Service as what's in your app. You're probably just seeing an issue that makes you think you have a different instance.
So what you need to do is:
angular.element(DOMElement).scope()
and then call $apply()
on it.Here's the code:
app.controller('MainCtrl', function($scope, myService) {
// Set a var on the scope to an object reference of the
// (or from the) service.
$scope.myService = myService;
});
app.factory('myService', function(){
return {
foo: 'bar'
};
});
//do a little something to change the service externally.
setTimeout(function(){
//get your angular element
var elem = angular.element(document.querySelector('[ng-controller]'));
//get the injector.
var injector = elem.injector();
//get the service.
var myService = injector.get('myService');
//update the service.
myService.foo = 'test';
//apply the changes to the scope.
elem.scope().$apply();
}, 2000)
Other thoughts:
$window
into your service, rather than use the window object, to maintain the testability of your service.