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by Cthulhu_ 4431 days ago
I have no idea what you're talking about; I've never had any issues with ngmin or angular's default (i.e. non-array / string) injection methods.
1 comments

I guess your mileage may vary, but in my experience, it isn't difficult to write reasonable code that ngmin fails to handle properly, and it's difficult to debug when it happens. It seems the best thing to do is to start with ngmin from the get-go and adopt a style guide that works with it. But I like the idea of a library that abstracts it away altogether.