| Uninstalling Vim on MS-Windows. |
| |
| There are three ways to remove Vim: |
| |
| 1. With the GUI uninstaller. |
| This is only available when Vim was installed with the self-installing |
| executable. This has a minimal number of questions. It can delete |
| everything that was installed. This also unregisters the VisVim.dll. |
| |
| 2. With uninstall.exe. |
| This removes most installed items, but does not delete the files you |
| unpacked. |
| |
| 3. By hand. |
| This is a bit more work, but you can decide exactly what you want to |
| remove. For uninstalling the "Edit with Vim" popup menu entry you still |
| have to use uninstall.exe. |
| |
| It's recommended to use the method that matches with how you installed Vim. |
| Thus if you installed Vim by hand, delete it by hand. |
| |
| The first two methods should be available from the Add/Remove software window |
| and the Vim entry in the Start menu. If these have been removed already, find |
| "uninstall-gui.exe" or "uninstall.exe" in the Vim directory. |
| Running these programs should be self-explanatory. Carefully read the |
| messages to avoid deleting something you want to keep. |
| |
| Here are guidelines for removing Vim by hand: |
| |
| 1. Remove the "Edit with Vim" popup menu entry, if it exists. This is done by |
| running the uninstall.exe program. It removes the registry entries for the |
| "Edit with Vim" popup menu entry. You only need to run uninstall.exe when |
| you have installed the menu entry. You can also run uninstall.exe from the |
| Control panel with the Add/Remove programs application. |
| Note that uninstall.exe offers you the option to uninstall other items. You |
| can skip this. |
| |
| 2. Only if you have used the OLE version of gvim: Remove the registration of |
| this program by running "gvim -unregister" in a console window. |
| |
| 3. Delete the executables. If you copied the executables to another location, |
| you will have to delete them from where you copied them to. If you don't |
| remember where they are, look in the directories from the $PATH environment |
| variable. |
| If you created .bat files when installing Vim, also search for vim.bat, |
| gvim.bat, etc. |
| |
| 4. If you want to completely delete vim, and are not going to install another |
| version, you can delete the vimrc files that you created. These are |
| normally located in a directory like "C:\vim". If the $VIM environment |
| variable is set, it will tell the name of the directory. Normally you can |
| delete everything in this directory. Warning: You might have put some |
| files there that you would like to save. If you did remove it all, you can |
| skip the next step. |
| |
| 5. Delete the distributed files. If you followed the directions, these will |
| be located in a directory like "C:\vim\vim81". If the $VIM environment |
| variable is set, the directory will be $VIM\vim81. Delete the "vim81" |
| directory and all that is in it. Warning: If you changed any of the |
| distributed files, or added some of your own files, you might want to save |
| these first. But normally you would not have changed or added files here. |
| |
| 6. Remove setting the $VIM and $VIMRUNTIME environment variable and adjust |
| $PATH. $VIM only needs to be removed if you are not going to install |
| another version of Vim. $VIMRUNTIME is mostly not set. Check if $PATH |
| contains the path of the vim directory. Note that $PATH may be set in |
| several places, you will have to find the right one, and only delete the |
| Vim path from it. You might need to use the "System Properties" editor to |
| change the environment variables. You can start it by selecting |
| Start/Settings/Control Panel and then "System". |
| |
| 7. If you added a Vim entry in the start menu, delete it. |
| |
| 8. If you created icons for Vim on the desktop, delete them. |
| |
| Vim does not use .ini files. The above should remove all Vim files, except |
| the ones that you moved elsewhere yourself. |