I often install packages from source with ./configure, make, make
install. Sometimes I'm not happy with the software for whatever reason
and I want to get rid of it. I don't actually know how to do this,
till now I've always done make clean or make distclean if available,
and then deleted the sources. But I installed something the other day
that messed up something else, and uninstalling in this manner did not
fix the problem. So how does one really fully undo what is done by
./configure, make, make install?

As far as I know there's no way to undo the installation. If you
delete the sources afterwards the location of the files is totally
unknown. You could look for them manually.

I'm not an expert to but my way is checkinstall (which is available as
rpm). As non-priviliged user you do the ./configure & make install.
Then you su to root and checkinstall. This will ask you for the name
of your installation and produces a rpm. As root you can install it
from /usr/src/RPMS. And if it wasn't the right you just hace to do a
rpm -e.

Someone mentioned that checkinstall made rpms have disadvantages
compared to "real" rpms. Just wanted you to know. As I said I'm not an
expert but for me it works fine...
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