AngularJS templates can only invoke functions that are available on a scope. So, whatever approach you take you need to have your function on a scope.
If you want your service's functions to be directly invokable from a template you've got several options:
The one you've tried - that is, expose the whole service on a scope:
$scope.service = service;
and then in a template:
<p>Hello {{service.getUsername();}}</p>
This is one-liner in a controller and makes all the service methods available on a scope and thus to templates.
Expose methods one by one
to have precise control over what gets exposed:
$scope.getUsername = service.getUsername;
and then in a template:
<p>Hello {{getUsername();}}</p>
This requires more work exposing methods but gives you fine-grained control over what gets exposed.
Expose proxing methods:
$scope.getMyUsername = function() {
//pre/post processing if needed
return service.getUsername();
};
You can use any of those methods or mix and combine them but at the end of the day a function must end up on a scope (either directly or through another object exposed on a scope).
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