I realize I'm a little late to the party, but seeing as this problem still exists, I feel it deserves an actual answer.
From what I've read elsewhere, the issue has to do with the individual number fields of the TimePicker all having exactly the same ID. The reason this is a problem is because when you rotate the screen, android closes all of your dialogs, reopens all of your dialogs usings the typical onCreateDialog -> onPrepareDialog, and then, most importantly, after you have made your dialogs, it goes back through and restores what used to be there. This means that no matter what you do beforehand, android is going to come in and break your TimePicker.
The answer, although not the prettiest option, is to come in after android and set it again.
Here's how I did it, I simply made my own TimePicker:
public class MyTimePicker extends TimePicker {
public MyTimePicker(Context context) {
super(context);
}
public MyTimePicker(Context context, AttributeSet attrs) {
super(context, attrs);
}
public MyTimePicker(Context context, AttributeSet attrs, int defStyle) {
super(context, attrs, defStyle);
}
private final static String B_MIN = "bMin";
private final static String B_HOUR = "bHour";
private final static String B_SUPER = "bSuper";
// here's the first key, we're going to override how the TimePicker saves
// its state
@Override
public Parcelable onSaveInstanceState() {
Bundle bundle = new Bundle();
bundle.putParcelable(B_SUPER, super.onSaveInstanceState());
bundle.putInt(B_MIN, getCurrentMinute());
bundle.putInt(B_HOUR, getCurrentHour());
return bundle;
}
// this function gets called when we are restoring, but before android
// does its thing
@Override
public void onRestoreInstanceState(Parcelable state) {
if (state instanceof Bundle) {
final Bundle bundle = (Bundle) state;
super.onRestoreInstanceState(bundle.getParcelable(B_SUPER));
// here it is, not the prettiest option, but it gets the job done
// we simply wait 0.1 sec and then update the TimePicker
// since all of this happens in the same thread, its guarenteed to
// be after the android reset
// also, this handler gets the HandlerLeak warning, I don't
// think this can leak though seeing as it's only called once
// with a 100 ms delay
(new Handler() {
@Override
public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
setCurrentMinute(bundle.getInt(B_MIN));
setCurrentHour(bundle.getInt(B_HOUR));
}
}).sendEmptyMessageDelayed(0, 100);
return;
}
super.onRestoreInstanceState(state);
}
}
And yes, the handler is necessary. If you simply run the setCurrent commands from onRestoreInstanceState android will simply override you.