do you have to remove nodejs from windows 10 if you want to install it on ubuntu code example

Example 1: uninstall node js and npm ubuntu

sudo apt-get purge --auto-remove nodejs

Example 2: uninstall node from linux debian

sudo rm -rf /usr/local/bin/npm /usr/local/share/man/man1/node* /usr/local/lib/dtrace/node.d ~/.npm ~/.node-gyp /opt/local/bin/node /opt/local/include/node /opt/local/lib/node_modules 

sudo rm -rf /usr/local/lib/node*

sudo rm -rf /usr/local/include/node*

sudo rm -rf /usr/local/bin/node*

Example 3: how to uninstall node.JS

How to remove/uninstall Node.js from Windows:
1. Run npm cache clean --force
2. Uninstall from Programs & Features with the uninstaller.
3. Reboot (or you probably can get away with killing all node-related processes from Task Manager).
4. Look for these folders and remove them (and their contents) if any still exist. Depending on the version you installed, UAC settings, and CPU architecture, these may or may not exist:
    C:\Program Files (x86)\Nodejs
    C:\Program Files\Nodejs
    C:\Users\{User}\AppData\Roaming\npm (or %appdata%\npm)
    C:\Users\{User}\AppData\Roaming\npm-cache (or %appdata%\npm-cache)
    C:\Users\{User}\.npmrc (and possibly check for that without the . prefix too)
    C:\Users\{User}\AppData\Local\Temp\npm-*
5. Check your %PATH% environment variable to ensure no references to Nodejs or npm exist.
6. If it's still not uninstalled, type where node at the command prompt and you'll see where it resides -- delete that (and probably the parent directory) too.
7. Reboot, for good measure.