I would say that between the two extremes, most software uninstalls leave user 
related files and settings on the computer. For one thing, the uninstall may 
not be permanent. It may be something the user does to "fix" something that 
seems wrong to him. For another thing, the user can easily delete said files if 
you put them in a readily accessible place and label them as such. Because of 
that, most users expect that their preferences and saved settings are going to 
be there when they reinstall. 

"Clean Freaks", well when it comes to computers, Clean Freaks are just 
obsessive compulsive people that someone gave a computer to, against all good 
judgement. I don't think anyone needs to worry about them... unless they know 
where you live.

Bob


On Feb 6, 2013, at 3:16 PM, Mark Wieder wrote:

> Scott Rossi <scott@...> writes:
> 
>> I totally agree, in principle.  In my case, the application is a game, and
>> the files to be deleted are text data, which are useless without the
>> application.  They don't contain any user created data (i.e. addresses,
>> personal info, etc) they are generated automatically by playing (progress)
>> or by downloading (levels).  So in this case, I don't think it's a big
>> deal to auto-remove, if possible.
> 
> What if I need to uninstall and reinstall the game? Would I lose the levels 
> I've
> already downloaded? Is there a downside to that?
> 
>> It seems like you can't win either way.
> 
> Pathologically true.
> 
>> The purists say "Don't remove
>> anything you didn't install!" and the neat freaks say "Dammit, I deleted
>> the app, I want all its files gone!"
> 
> That's where prompting the user comes in. Ask before wiping the files, and if
> they OK it, do the dirty and you're in the clear.

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