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I installed Android studio some time ago using the following suggested method:

To set up Android Studio on Linux:

Unpack the downloaded Tar file, android-studio-ide--linux.zip, into an appropriate location for your applications. To launch Android Studio, navigate to the android-studio/bin/ directory in a terminal and execute studio.sh. You may want to add android-studio/bin/ to your PATH environmental variable so that you can start Android Studio from any directory. Follow the links to install the SDK outside of the Android Studio directories.

For whatever reason it has become corrupt and insists I must un-install and re-install. I can't for the life of me find how to un-install it however.

I didn't use apt-get so I can't do apt-get remove.

Does anyone have any suggestions?

9 Answers 9

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These are default locations as of Android Studio 1.0.2 and it is possible to change them by editing ..../android-studio/bin/idea.properties.

  1. Delete the android-studio folder;
  2. Delete the sdk folder if it is in not inside the android-studio directory;
  3. Delete ~/.AndroidStudio, which contains config and system;
  4. Delete ~/.android;
  5. Delete ~/.local/share/applications/jetbrains-android-studio.desktop, if you created a shortcut using Configure->Create Desktop Entry.

Note: Add on to step#5 above - Sometimes the icon launcher can be in one of the following locations to:

/usr/share/applications
/usr/local/share/applications

If your launcher file is in any of the first two directories, you will require root permissions to remove it.

PPAs
A deeper step of removing Android Studio completely from your Linux Distribution would also include the removal of PPAs related to Android Studio.

In Ubuntu 16.04,

  • Go to Software and Updates > Other Software
  • Scroll down the list and select to find the ones related to Android-studio
  • Click remove and authenticate

This helps stopping updates and the very annoying error message:
The package has not been installed. I can't find the archive for it.

6
  • 2
    actually there are multiple AndroidStudio directory. rm -rf ~/.AndroidStudio*
    – shantanu
    Oct 24, 2017 at 13:13
  • 1
    + /.gradle - may be rm from your home? Sep 20, 2018 at 7:52
  • 1
    @NikolayBaranenko: If you only use Gradle with Android Studio I suppose it's safe to delete ~/.gradle as well.
    – Daniel
    Sep 23, 2018 at 14:13
  • 1
    Adding to the answer you might need to remove env variables ` export ANDROID_HOME=$HOME/Android/Sdk export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/emulator export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/tools export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools ` Aug 16, 2019 at 9:41
  • in my case, there is another directory: /usr/local/android-studio Just a warning: be very careful when trying to remove this directory using the terminal. Avoid accidentally removing any other directory.
    – qamnott
    May 12, 2021 at 15:48
20

To re-configure you have to delete the following (hidden) folders:

~/.android ~/.AndroidStudio

To show these hidden folders in the file manager press Ctrl+H when in your home directory (aka "~")

17

I would suggest to check the installation directory for a readme or an uninstall script but in general: do what you did to install it in reverse order and delete everything you added as a setting or as a file on your system related to that installation.


Installations done with a tar file are mosttimes uninstalled with the rm command. You go to the directory where you went for this: "Unpack the downloaded Tar file, android-studio-ide--linux.zip, into an appropriate location for your applications" and rm the files and directories created here.

If you did "You may want to add android-studio/bin/ to your PATH environmental" too you will need to undo this alteration by deleting android-studio/bin/ from the file you added this PATH too.

9

Android Studio versions 4.0+ have built-in uninstall and replace functionality that uninstalls packages held in multiple locations by previous versions of Android Studio. Just run the installer of the latest Android Studio.

To uninstall the Android Studio snap package run the following command:

sudo snap remove android-studio

To uninstall a manually installed Android Studio .deb package search in /etc/apt/sources.list to check if there is a software source for a PPA for Android Studio, for example ppa:maarten-fonville/android-studio. If so, remove this PPA by running a command of the form sudo apt-add-repository --remove ppa:maarten-fonville/android-studio. The italicized text in the preceding command indicates that the name of the PPA can be changed if Android Studio was installed from a different PPA.

Then run the following commands:

sudo apt update 
sudo apt purge android-studio  
sudo apt autoremove  

These commands will remove Android Studio, remove the dependencies of Android Studio that are no longer required by other packages and will also purge all related system configuration files.

7

For people who installed Android Studio using Ubuntu make (umake android) you can simply uninstall it by running :

umake android --remove

After that just delete Android Studio's related folders in your /home folder :

rm -r ~/.AndroidStudio
rm -r ~/.android
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To "uninstall" this just delete the folder.
I think your problem is that you unzipped it to unfit folder - either you have no launch permissions for it, or it has space and rare symbols in path, or something. It should just work, you know.

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If you installed as root then your SDK location is /root/Android.

So you should delete that as well.

1

Adding on to Daniel and abu_bua's answer above, at least with android studio 2021 there are also config files that can be placed into ~/.config/Google/AndroidStudio2021.3, per the install txt file inside the tarball. It also mentions that some data cache may be stored in ~/.local/share/Google/AndroidStudio2021.3.

0

You can also use "Stacer" the software to remove complete android studio so for install "Stacer" use below command:

  • sudo apt install stacer Or:
  • install stacer from store ubuntuubuntu store
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