On 10 Sep, 15:45, Milos Prudek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I run "make install" of Python 2.4.4 and now I discovered that I do not like > the default placement of my install. The Makefile does not support > an "uninstall" option. > > Is there a way to uninstall Python compiled from sources?
If you're installing from sources "manually", you might want to consider checkinstall to give you the option of an uninstall for those software distributions which don't support "make uninstall": http://www.asic-linux.com.mx/~izto/checkinstall/ I seem to recall at some point doing a checkinstall on one or more programs, installing the resulting packages, then uninstalling them in order to remove installed files. That might be one approach you could take, although it obviously won't restore any files overwritten when you originally installed Python. That said, Python tends to install into /usr/local by default and is fairly conservative about where it puts its files, so it's unlikely that anything was overwritten. Paul -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list