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Home/ Questions/Q 922393
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T19:01:22+00:00 2026-05-15T19:01:22+00:00

I’m slighty puzzled about how android’s AppWidget machinery works. I reimplemented the AppWidgetProvider’s constructor

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I’m slighty puzzled about how android’s AppWidget machinery works.

I reimplemented the AppWidgetProvider’s constructor like this:

public class MyProvider extends AppWidgetProvider {

   public MyProvider() {
     Log.d("TEST", "Creating...")
   }

   public void onUpdate(..., int[] appWidgetIds) {
      // updating stuff here
   } 
}

From what I’ve read in the docs, I understood that AppWidgetProvider is instantiated once, when widget of that type is added for the first time. If another widget of the same type gets added, it will be managed by exactly that provider.

But I just discovered that this is not the case!

For each widget I add, android creates a new MyProvider (I see that from ‘adb logcat’ – it prints “Creating…” for each widget)!
I don’t understad why 🙂
Maybe I got something wrong? Or documentation isn’t clear on something.
What’s the reason of having appWidgetIds passed to onUpdate and other methods if each provider is managing only ONE widget?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T19:01:22+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 7:01 pm

    AppWidgetProvider is a subclass of BroadcastReceiver. Quoting the BroadcastReceiver documentation:

    A BroadcastReceiver object is only
    valid for the duration of the call to
    onReceive(Context, Intent). Once your
    code returns from this function, the
    system considers the object to be
    finished and no longer active.

    Hence, AppWidgetProviders are disposable and should be treated as such. Every app widget operation (update, etc.) will result in a provider being created, used, and discarded.

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