I want to uninstall Eclipse version Mars 2, but it doesn't appear in the "Programs and Features" area of the Windows Control Panel. The installer has installed start menu shortcuts and other artifacts, so it's not just a matter of deleting the installation folder.
Java – How to uninstall Eclipse
eclipseeclipse-installerjavaoomphuninstallation
Related Solutions
Map<String, String> map = ...
for (Map.Entry<String, String> entry : map.entrySet()) {
System.out.println(entry.getKey() + "/" + entry.getValue());
}
On Java 10+:
for (var entry : map.entrySet()) {
System.out.println(entry.getKey() + "/" + entry.getValue());
}
Summarize other answers I found 11 main ways to do this (see below). And I wrote some performance tests (see results below):
Ways to convert an InputStream to a String:
Using
IOUtils.toString
(Apache Utils)String result = IOUtils.toString(inputStream, StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
Using
CharStreams
(Guava)String result = CharStreams.toString(new InputStreamReader( inputStream, Charsets.UTF_8));
Using
Scanner
(JDK)Scanner s = new Scanner(inputStream).useDelimiter("\\A"); String result = s.hasNext() ? s.next() : "";
Using Stream API (Java 8). Warning: This solution converts different line breaks (like
\r\n
) to\n
.String result = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(inputStream)) .lines().collect(Collectors.joining("\n"));
Using parallel Stream API (Java 8). Warning: This solution converts different line breaks (like
\r\n
) to\n
.String result = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(inputStream)) .lines().parallel().collect(Collectors.joining("\n"));
Using
InputStreamReader
andStringBuilder
(JDK)int bufferSize = 1024; char[] buffer = new char[bufferSize]; StringBuilder out = new StringBuilder(); Reader in = new InputStreamReader(stream, StandardCharsets.UTF_8); for (int numRead; (numRead = in.read(buffer, 0, buffer.length)) > 0; ) { out.append(buffer, 0, numRead); } return out.toString();
Using
StringWriter
andIOUtils.copy
(Apache Commons)StringWriter writer = new StringWriter(); IOUtils.copy(inputStream, writer, "UTF-8"); return writer.toString();
Using
ByteArrayOutputStream
andinputStream.read
(JDK)ByteArrayOutputStream result = new ByteArrayOutputStream(); byte[] buffer = new byte[1024]; for (int length; (length = inputStream.read(buffer)) != -1; ) { result.write(buffer, 0, length); } // StandardCharsets.UTF_8.name() > JDK 7 return result.toString("UTF-8");
Using
BufferedReader
(JDK). Warning: This solution converts different line breaks (like\n\r
) toline.separator
system property (for example, in Windows to "\r\n").String newLine = System.getProperty("line.separator"); BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader( new InputStreamReader(inputStream)); StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder(); for (String line; (line = reader.readLine()) != null; ) { if (result.length() > 0) { result.append(newLine); } result.append(line); } return result.toString();
Using
BufferedInputStream
andByteArrayOutputStream
(JDK)BufferedInputStream bis = new BufferedInputStream(inputStream); ByteArrayOutputStream buf = new ByteArrayOutputStream(); for (int result = bis.read(); result != -1; result = bis.read()) { buf.write((byte) result); } // StandardCharsets.UTF_8.name() > JDK 7 return buf.toString("UTF-8");
Using
inputStream.read()
andStringBuilder
(JDK). Warning: This solution has problems with Unicode, for example with Russian text (works correctly only with non-Unicode text)StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(); for (int ch; (ch = inputStream.read()) != -1; ) { sb.append((char) ch); } return sb.toString();
Warning:
Solutions 4, 5 and 9 convert different line breaks to one.
Solution 11 can't work correctly with Unicode text
Performance tests
Performance tests for small String
(length = 175), url in github (mode = Average Time, system = Linux, score 1,343 is the best):
Benchmark Mode Cnt Score Error Units
8. ByteArrayOutputStream and read (JDK) avgt 10 1,343 ± 0,028 us/op
6. InputStreamReader and StringBuilder (JDK) avgt 10 6,980 ± 0,404 us/op
10. BufferedInputStream, ByteArrayOutputStream avgt 10 7,437 ± 0,735 us/op
11. InputStream.read() and StringBuilder (JDK) avgt 10 8,977 ± 0,328 us/op
7. StringWriter and IOUtils.copy (Apache) avgt 10 10,613 ± 0,599 us/op
1. IOUtils.toString (Apache Utils) avgt 10 10,605 ± 0,527 us/op
3. Scanner (JDK) avgt 10 12,083 ± 0,293 us/op
2. CharStreams (guava) avgt 10 12,999 ± 0,514 us/op
4. Stream Api (Java 8) avgt 10 15,811 ± 0,605 us/op
9. BufferedReader (JDK) avgt 10 16,038 ± 0,711 us/op
5. parallel Stream Api (Java 8) avgt 10 21,544 ± 0,583 us/op
Performance tests for big String
(length = 50100), url in github (mode = Average Time, system = Linux, score 200,715 is the best):
Benchmark Mode Cnt Score Error Units
8. ByteArrayOutputStream and read (JDK) avgt 10 200,715 ± 18,103 us/op
1. IOUtils.toString (Apache Utils) avgt 10 300,019 ± 8,751 us/op
6. InputStreamReader and StringBuilder (JDK) avgt 10 347,616 ± 130,348 us/op
7. StringWriter and IOUtils.copy (Apache) avgt 10 352,791 ± 105,337 us/op
2. CharStreams (guava) avgt 10 420,137 ± 59,877 us/op
9. BufferedReader (JDK) avgt 10 632,028 ± 17,002 us/op
5. parallel Stream Api (Java 8) avgt 10 662,999 ± 46,199 us/op
4. Stream Api (Java 8) avgt 10 701,269 ± 82,296 us/op
10. BufferedInputStream, ByteArrayOutputStream avgt 10 740,837 ± 5,613 us/op
3. Scanner (JDK) avgt 10 751,417 ± 62,026 us/op
11. InputStream.read() and StringBuilder (JDK) avgt 10 2919,350 ± 1101,942 us/op
Graphs (performance tests depending on Input Stream length in Windows 7 system)
Performance test (Average Time) depending on Input Stream length in Windows 7 system:
length 182 546 1092 3276 9828 29484 58968
test8 0.38 0.938 1.868 4.448 13.412 36.459 72.708
test4 2.362 3.609 5.573 12.769 40.74 81.415 159.864
test5 3.881 5.075 6.904 14.123 50.258 129.937 166.162
test9 2.237 3.493 5.422 11.977 45.98 89.336 177.39
test6 1.261 2.12 4.38 10.698 31.821 86.106 186.636
test7 1.601 2.391 3.646 8.367 38.196 110.221 211.016
test1 1.529 2.381 3.527 8.411 40.551 105.16 212.573
test3 3.035 3.934 8.606 20.858 61.571 118.744 235.428
test2 3.136 6.238 10.508 33.48 43.532 118.044 239.481
test10 1.593 4.736 7.527 20.557 59.856 162.907 323.147
test11 3.913 11.506 23.26 68.644 207.591 600.444 1211.545
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Best Answer
There is no automated uninstaller.
You have to remove Eclipse manually by deleting some directories and files.
Note: I use Unix style paths in this answer but the locations should be the same on Windows or Unix systems, so
~
refers to the user home directory even on Windows.Why is there no uninstaller?
According to this discussion about uninstalling Eclipse, the reasoning for not providing an uninstaller is that the Eclipse installer is supposed to just automate a few tasks that in the past had to be done manually (like downloading and extracting Eclipse and adding shortcuts), so they also can be undone manually. There is no entry in "Programs and Features" because the installer does not register anything in the system registry.
How to quickly uninstall Eclipse
Just delete the Eclipse directory and any desktop and start menu shortcuts and be done with it, if you don't mind a few leftover files.
In my opinion this is generally enough and I would stop here, because multiple Eclipse installations can share some files and you don't accidentally want to delete those shared files. You also keep all your projects.
How to completely uninstall Eclipse
If you really want to remove Eclipse without leaving any traces, you have to manually delete
~/eclipse/photon/
)The installer has a "Bundle Pools" menu entry which lists the locations of all bundle pools. If you have other Eclipse installations on your system you can use the "Cleanup Agent" to clean up unused bundles. If you don't have any other Eclipse installations you can delete the whole bundle pool directory instead (by default
~/p2/
).If you want to completely remove the Eclipse installer too, delete the installer's executable and the
~/.eclipse/
directory.Depending on what kind of work you did with Eclipse, there can be more directories that you may want to delete. If you used Maven, then
~/.m2/
contains the Maven cache and settings (shared with Maven CLI and other IDEs). If you develop Eclipse plugins, then there might be JUnit workspaces from test runs, next to you Eclipse workspace. Likewise other build tools and development environments used in Eclipse could have created similar directories.How to delete all projects
If you want to delete your projects and workspace metadata, you have to delete your workspace(s). The default workspace location is ´~/workspace/´. You can also search for the
.metadata
directory to get all Eclipse workspaces on your machine.If you are working with Git projects, these are generally not saved in the workspace but in the
~/git/
directory.Addendum: Windows Registry
Even though Eclipse isn't "installed" like a regular Windows application, there are still a few entries that get written to the system registry. If you search the Registry for "eclipse" you'll likely find some entries for URL handlers named
eclipse+command
,eclipse+mpc
oreclipse+installer
. They are used e.g. for letting you install Eclipse plugins from the browser.On my system I see a few other entries which I believe are created by Windows itself and not by Eclipse (e.g. entries in the list of recently used executables). Whether you want to delete those entries is up to you. Personally I wouldn't, but on the other hand it probably won't break anything if you do. Just be aware that registry "cleaning" is a controversial topic.