Most vehicles old enough to need new injectors don't have any computer feedback for injector errors. Instead they would be deduced by a misfire on a particular cylinder, an out of range O2 sensor reading, possibly a fuel trim reading out of normal range, or in worst case a glowing red catalytic converter due to fuel being dumped into the exhaust. Maybe a vac leak if the injector o-ring is leaking.
It would be good to mention the make/model/engine you're dealing with, what (problem or error indication) precipitated the injector swap, and whether any operational problem remains or whether the only issue is an error message?
If it set an OBDII error code, did you clear the code after the repair? Did you do the repair yourself or this came from a repair shop with a problem remaining?
Do check the wiring. With engine running you should get voltage pulses on the injector connector from a multimeter reading, which can be compared to the pulses on the other working injectors' connectors.