known issue.

https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=77162

You shouldn't actually use an aar as a provided dependency. This makes no
sense if you have resources.

(yes you could technically have an aar with resources in it, but we don't
yet handle this case).

On Wed, Oct 29, 2014 at 3:00 PM, Chris Sarbora <[email protected]> wrote:

> If this isn't already a known bug, I'll create and attach a project that
> reproduces the issue. I've found that using the "provided" configuration
> with a JAR artifact will (correctly) include the jar on the classpath but
> exclude it from the APK, whereas specifying an AAR artifact ends up with
> that code being *included* in the APK. Currently the only workaround I
> have is to hack up the proguard<Variant> task and add the undesired classes
> to an exclude pattern.
>
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-- 
Xavier Ducrohet
Android SDK Tech Lead
Google Inc.
http://developer.android.com | http://tools.android.com

Please do not send me questions directly. Thanks!

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