Button "Delete" in 'Service' partition

Developers, burn in hell for the button 'Delete' program in partition 'Service'.

This button denies the possibility of uninstalling program at all.

Is it an evil joke?

'Delete' usually just deletes the uninstaller entry in the list for the selected program.

The uninstaller will still be in the the program files of the said software so the program can stil be uninstalled

Is this not the case for you?

What did you mean by the partition 'Service' ?

Can you do a screenshot?

Sorry for russian version, but I hope you understand what I mean

img.png

It only deletes the ENTRY for the uninstaller.

You can still uninstall the program from the uninstaller in Program Files.

Quick example..

Capture.PNG

Conclusion: button "Delete" is unnecessary (even harmful), since there is an “Uninstall” button

20 minutes ago, Ladonin said:
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		Conclusion: button "Delete" is unnecessary (even <span lang="en" xml:lang="en"><span title="">harmful</span></span>) 
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I agree with you :)

I do see a potential use for it - but it would be better named 'Hide'. (or 'Hide from List').

Hide with depriving possibility to show in the future.

Hm...

I think the amount of people who would have a potential use for it is very, very small.

Firstly I and all I know pressed button "Delete".

Most people who want to delete a program first click “Delete”.

I don't think the delete button should be there.

Depends upon what type of install package created the entry rather it can just be uninstalled from the program folder, if something was installed with an .MSI installer it could be opening a can of worms deleting entries in there, and there's also some lesser known rival installation maker programs to the likes of freeware like Inno Setup and NSIS that didn't create an uninstall.exe in the folder where a program is installed, they instead place an uninstall list (.LST) or .DAT file in the program folder however the uninstall EXE file (may not necessarily be named uninstall.exe) is instead placed in the Windows directory and a command had to be issued to it to uninstall the software properly - I haven't seen those type in ages.

I think the only reason it exists is perhaps since some programs can be uninstalled but leave an orphaned uninstall reference in there even though it had successfully been removed, and when attempting to uninstall again an error is shown.

Although that can still happen even in 2019 it all seems so legacy to me - I remember the Windows 95/98 era (and CCleaner supported Win9x many years ago) seeming to have issues with poorly written uninstall routines leaving references behind in Add/Remove Programs hence the reason there were more than enough standalone tools to remove uninstalled orphaned entries.