550
votes

I recently downloaded Android Studio on my Macbook Pro and I messed up with it every time I open it. It gives me plugin errors and several other errors. I need to uninstall it completely from my mac. I tried to delete it from my mac and then install it again as if you would do the first time, but it did nothing and now the same problems occur.

How can I manage to remove it completely and install a fresh one again?

7

7 Answers

1378
votes

Execute these commands in the terminal (excluding the lines with hashtags - they're comments):

# Deletes the Android Studio application
# Note that this may be different depending on what you named the application as, or whether you downloaded the preview version
rm -Rf /Applications/Android\ Studio.app
# Delete All Android Studio related preferences
# The asterisk here should target all folders/files beginning with the string before it
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/AndroidStudio*
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/Google/AndroidStudio*
# Deletes the Android Studio's plist file
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.google.android.*
# Deletes the Android Emulator's plist file
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.android.*
# Deletes mainly plugins (or at least according to what mine (Edric) contains)
rm -Rf ~/Library/Application\ Support/AndroidStudio*
rm -Rf ~/Library/Application\ Support/Google/AndroidStudio*
# Deletes all logs that Android Studio outputs
rm -Rf ~/Library/Logs/AndroidStudio*
rm -Rf ~/Library/Logs/Google/AndroidStudio*
# Deletes Android Studio's caches
rm -Rf ~/Library/Caches/AndroidStudio*
# Deletes older versions of Android Studio
rm -Rf ~/.AndroidStudio*

If you would like to delete all projects:

rm -Rf ~/AndroidStudioProjects

To remove gradle related files (caches & wrapper)

rm -Rf ~/.gradle

Use the below command to delete all Android Virtual Devices(AVDs) and keystores.

Note: This folder is used by other Android IDEs as well, so if you still using other IDE you may not want to delete this folder)

rm -Rf ~/.android

To delete Android SDK tools

rm -Rf ~/Library/Android*

Emulator Console Auth Token

rm -Rf ~/.emulator_console_auth_token

Thanks to those who commented/improved on this answer!


Notes

  1. The flags for rm are case-sensitive1 (as with most other commands), which means that the f flag must be in lower case. However, the r flag can also be capitalised.
  2. The flags for rm can be either combined together or separated. They don't have to be combined.

What the flags indicate

  1. The r flag indicates that the rm command should-

    attempt to remove the file hierarchy rooted in each file argument. - DESCRIPTION section on the manpage for rm (See man rm for more info)

  2. The f flag indicates that the rm command should-

    attempt to remove the files without prompting for confirmation, regardless of the file's permissions. - DESCRIPTION section on the manpage for rm (See man rm for more info)

51
votes

Run the following commands in the terminal:

rm -Rf /Applications/Android\ Studio.app  
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/AndroidStudio*  
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.google.android.*  
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.android.*  
rm -Rf ~/Library/Application\ Support/AndroidStudio*  
rm -Rf ~/Library/Logs/AndroidStudio*  
rm -Rf ~/Library/Caches/AndroidStudio*  
rm -Rf ~/.AndroidStudio*  
rm -Rf ~/.gradle  
rm -Rf ~/.android  
rm -Rf ~/Library/Android*  
rm -Rf /usr/local/var/lib/android-sdk/  

To delete all projects:

rm -Rf ~/AndroidStudioProjects  
15
votes

I was also facing same kind of problem on my Macbook Pro. I took these very simple steps and freshly installed Android Studio.

** Link Contains Images, look if facing any problem.

These Very Simple Steps Can Solve Your Problem.

  1. Type "Command+option+Space Bar"
  2. Type "Android Studio"
  3. Click '+' button just below search box. image
  4. A new bar will come up "Kind" is "any" click on "kind" --> Others --> search for "system file" and select that by putting a tick mark.! And click on Ok. image
  5. Then select "are included" from the drop down menu !
  6. Then you get a lot of system file that need to be deleted to complete the fully un-installation of any app.
  7. Click "command+A" to select all files and take a look on the file remove is some video files are also included. And click "command + Delete"
  8. Empty your trash. Done
14
votes

For someone using Android Studio 4.0 or above on MacOS 10.15.1 or above. Using command line blow:

# Deletes the Android Studio application
# Note that this may be different depending on what you named the application as, or whether you downloaded the preview version
rm -Rf /Applications/Android\ Studio.app
# Delete All Android Studio related preferences
# The asterisk here should target all folders/files beginning with the string before it
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/Google/AndroidStudio*
# Deletes the Android Studio's plist file
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.google.android.*
# Deletes the Android Emulator's plist file
rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.android.*
# Deletes mainly plugins (or at least according to what mine (Edric) contains)
rm -Rf ~/Library/Application\ Support/Google/AndroidStudio*
# Deletes all logs that Android Studio outputs
rm -Rf ~/Library/Logs/Google/AndroidStudio*
# Deletes Android Studio's caches
rm -Rf ~/Library/Caches/Google/AndroidStudio*
# Deletes older versions of Android Studio
rm -Rf ~/.AndroidStudio*

Difference

Library/Preferences/Google/AndroidStudio*

Library/Logs/Google/AndroidStudio*

Library/Caches/Google/AndroidStudio*

13
votes

You may also delete gradle file, if you don't use gradle any where else:

rm -Rfv ~/.gradle/

because .gradle folder contains cached artifacts that are no longer needed.

11
votes

Some of the files individually listed by Simon would also be found with something like the following command, but with some additional assurance about thoroughness, and without the recklessness of using rm -rf with wildcards:

find ~ \
  -path ~/Library/Caches/Metadata/Safari -prune -o \
  -iname \*android\*studio\* -print -prune

Also don't forget about the SDK, which is now separate from the application, and ~/.gradle/ (see vijay's answer).

0
votes

As we all know, we can’t just drag and drop the Android Studio app to Trash. The reason is that in this case, applications leave their service files on your Mac. To uninstall Android Studio with all its service files at once, use the Terminal command line.

Follow the steps below:

  1. Open Mac Terminal.Open Mac Terminal

  2. Execute the following commands from the Terminal:

rm -Rf /Applications/Android\ Studio.app

rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/AndroidStudio*

rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.google.android.*

rm -Rf ~/Library/Preferences/com.android.*

rm -Rf ~/Library/Application\ Support/AndroidStudio*

rm -Rf ~/Library/Logs/AndroidStudio*

rm -Rf ~/Library/Caches/AndroidStudio*

rm -Rf ~/.AndroidStudio*

rm -Rf ~/AndroidStudioProjects

rm -Rf ~/.gradle

rm -Rf ~/.android

rm -Rf ~/Library/Android*

Output will be as below

This will delete all related files, including Android SDK.