Uninstall psensor

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up vote
4
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I've used this post as a guideline: How can you completely remove a package?



More precisely i did in order:



sudo apt-get purge psensor

sudo apt-get autoremove


Is there anything else i should do to have psensor completely removed from my system (Ubuntu 16.04)?










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  • 2




    No, why do you think anything else is needed?
    – Byte Commander
    Jan 28 at 12:37










  • @ByteCommander from the mentioned post: [..] This does not remove non-systemwide configuration files. Specifically, it does not remove user-specific configuration: It does not remove the configuration files and directories located in users' home directories (or in the .config subdirectory of their home directories), created by the software the package provides. If these files/folders are not stored in .config, they usually start with a . themselves. Either way, you can see them with ls by using the -a or -A flag, and you can se ...
    – Zeno Raiser
    Jan 28 at 12:39







  • 1




    @ZenoRaiser that refers to files you create yourself that are support by a piece of software.
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 28 at 12:49






  • 2




    There might be a hidden .psensor folder in your home directory. Delete it if you desire to do so.
    – Byte Commander
    Jan 28 at 12:51














up vote
4
down vote

favorite












I've used this post as a guideline: How can you completely remove a package?



More precisely i did in order:



sudo apt-get purge psensor

sudo apt-get autoremove


Is there anything else i should do to have psensor completely removed from my system (Ubuntu 16.04)?










share|improve this question

















  • 2




    No, why do you think anything else is needed?
    – Byte Commander
    Jan 28 at 12:37










  • @ByteCommander from the mentioned post: [..] This does not remove non-systemwide configuration files. Specifically, it does not remove user-specific configuration: It does not remove the configuration files and directories located in users' home directories (or in the .config subdirectory of their home directories), created by the software the package provides. If these files/folders are not stored in .config, they usually start with a . themselves. Either way, you can see them with ls by using the -a or -A flag, and you can se ...
    – Zeno Raiser
    Jan 28 at 12:39







  • 1




    @ZenoRaiser that refers to files you create yourself that are support by a piece of software.
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 28 at 12:49






  • 2




    There might be a hidden .psensor folder in your home directory. Delete it if you desire to do so.
    – Byte Commander
    Jan 28 at 12:51












up vote
4
down vote

favorite









up vote
4
down vote

favorite











I've used this post as a guideline: How can you completely remove a package?



More precisely i did in order:



sudo apt-get purge psensor

sudo apt-get autoremove


Is there anything else i should do to have psensor completely removed from my system (Ubuntu 16.04)?










share|improve this question













I've used this post as a guideline: How can you completely remove a package?



More precisely i did in order:



sudo apt-get purge psensor

sudo apt-get autoremove


Is there anything else i should do to have psensor completely removed from my system (Ubuntu 16.04)?







16.04 uninstall






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 28 at 12:36









Zeno Raiser

165112




165112







  • 2




    No, why do you think anything else is needed?
    – Byte Commander
    Jan 28 at 12:37










  • @ByteCommander from the mentioned post: [..] This does not remove non-systemwide configuration files. Specifically, it does not remove user-specific configuration: It does not remove the configuration files and directories located in users' home directories (or in the .config subdirectory of their home directories), created by the software the package provides. If these files/folders are not stored in .config, they usually start with a . themselves. Either way, you can see them with ls by using the -a or -A flag, and you can se ...
    – Zeno Raiser
    Jan 28 at 12:39







  • 1




    @ZenoRaiser that refers to files you create yourself that are support by a piece of software.
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 28 at 12:49






  • 2




    There might be a hidden .psensor folder in your home directory. Delete it if you desire to do so.
    – Byte Commander
    Jan 28 at 12:51












  • 2




    No, why do you think anything else is needed?
    – Byte Commander
    Jan 28 at 12:37










  • @ByteCommander from the mentioned post: [..] This does not remove non-systemwide configuration files. Specifically, it does not remove user-specific configuration: It does not remove the configuration files and directories located in users' home directories (or in the .config subdirectory of their home directories), created by the software the package provides. If these files/folders are not stored in .config, they usually start with a . themselves. Either way, you can see them with ls by using the -a or -A flag, and you can se ...
    – Zeno Raiser
    Jan 28 at 12:39







  • 1




    @ZenoRaiser that refers to files you create yourself that are support by a piece of software.
    – Rinzwind
    Jan 28 at 12:49






  • 2




    There might be a hidden .psensor folder in your home directory. Delete it if you desire to do so.
    – Byte Commander
    Jan 28 at 12:51







2




2




No, why do you think anything else is needed?
– Byte Commander
Jan 28 at 12:37




No, why do you think anything else is needed?
– Byte Commander
Jan 28 at 12:37












@ByteCommander from the mentioned post: [..] This does not remove non-systemwide configuration files. Specifically, it does not remove user-specific configuration: It does not remove the configuration files and directories located in users' home directories (or in the .config subdirectory of their home directories), created by the software the package provides. If these files/folders are not stored in .config, they usually start with a . themselves. Either way, you can see them with ls by using the -a or -A flag, and you can se ...
– Zeno Raiser
Jan 28 at 12:39





@ByteCommander from the mentioned post: [..] This does not remove non-systemwide configuration files. Specifically, it does not remove user-specific configuration: It does not remove the configuration files and directories located in users' home directories (or in the .config subdirectory of their home directories), created by the software the package provides. If these files/folders are not stored in .config, they usually start with a . themselves. Either way, you can see them with ls by using the -a or -A flag, and you can se ...
– Zeno Raiser
Jan 28 at 12:39





1




1




@ZenoRaiser that refers to files you create yourself that are support by a piece of software.
– Rinzwind
Jan 28 at 12:49




@ZenoRaiser that refers to files you create yourself that are support by a piece of software.
– Rinzwind
Jan 28 at 12:49




2




2




There might be a hidden .psensor folder in your home directory. Delete it if you desire to do so.
– Byte Commander
Jan 28 at 12:51




There might be a hidden .psensor folder in your home directory. Delete it if you desire to do so.
– Byte Commander
Jan 28 at 12:51










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

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up vote
6
down vote



accepted










The commands to completely remove Psensor in your question are correct. Alternatively you can combine both commands in a single line like this:



sudo apt purge --auto-remove psensor 





share|improve this answer





























    up vote
    -1
    down vote













    Actually when you purge it and afterwards autoremove, removes the program completely including the files and dependencies. So what you do is correct and nothing else needed.






    share|improve this answer






















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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      6
      down vote



      accepted










      The commands to completely remove Psensor in your question are correct. Alternatively you can combine both commands in a single line like this:



      sudo apt purge --auto-remove psensor 





      share|improve this answer


























        up vote
        6
        down vote



        accepted










        The commands to completely remove Psensor in your question are correct. Alternatively you can combine both commands in a single line like this:



        sudo apt purge --auto-remove psensor 





        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          6
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          6
          down vote



          accepted






          The commands to completely remove Psensor in your question are correct. Alternatively you can combine both commands in a single line like this:



          sudo apt purge --auto-remove psensor 





          share|improve this answer














          The commands to completely remove Psensor in your question are correct. Alternatively you can combine both commands in a single line like this:



          sudo apt purge --auto-remove psensor 






          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Mar 17 at 8:59

























          answered Jan 28 at 12:41









          karel

          51.9k11110133




          51.9k11110133






















              up vote
              -1
              down vote













              Actually when you purge it and afterwards autoremove, removes the program completely including the files and dependencies. So what you do is correct and nothing else needed.






              share|improve this answer


























                up vote
                -1
                down vote













                Actually when you purge it and afterwards autoremove, removes the program completely including the files and dependencies. So what you do is correct and nothing else needed.






                share|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  -1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  -1
                  down vote









                  Actually when you purge it and afterwards autoremove, removes the program completely including the files and dependencies. So what you do is correct and nothing else needed.






                  share|improve this answer














                  Actually when you purge it and afterwards autoremove, removes the program completely including the files and dependencies. So what you do is correct and nothing else needed.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Jan 28 at 15:17

























                  answered Jan 28 at 14:33









                  Donald Shahini

                  829




                  829



























                       

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