• fembinary@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    18 hours ago

    thats the thing with snaps: they go all over the place on your system, so even if you uninstall it (which itself is a tiring and cumbersome task at times!), they magically stay everywhere on the systems, with tons of folders and files.

      • lengau@midwest.social
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        4 hours ago

        They’re downloaded somewhere under /var/snap and by default a snap only has access to a limited set of directories - one under /var/snap for system-wide data (generally used by snaps that run services like cups or MySQL) and one under ~/snap for each user. When you snap remove an app, it bundles that up into a file that’s kept for a while in case you reinstall, but it won’t if you use --purge.

        Obviously many apps request access to other places (such as non-hidden directories in your homedir) so they can read or write stuff, but that’s down to the app to then behave correctly (same as with any other packaging system).

      • fembinary@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        17 hours ago

        install yes, but there are tons of other files and folders that get created, IIRC even pseudo-users or something along those lines? (or that was distro-specific perhaps)

        • Sibshops@lemm.ee
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          16 hours ago

          You mean like the program itself is creating files? The issue would be the same whether apt or snap is used, in this case.