-<li>You must first determine where rEFInd is installed. If you used the
- default installation location, this will be <tt>/EFI/refind</tt> on
- your main partition if you installed rEFInd 0.8.3 or earlier, or in
- <tt>EFI/refind</tt> or <tt>EFI/BOOT</tt> on the ESP if you installed
- rEFInd 0.8.4 with the default options. If you used the
- <tt>--ownhfs</tt> option, rEFInd will be in the
- <tt>System/Library/CoreServices</tt> directory on the volume you
- specified.</li>
+<li>You must first determine where rEFInd is installed. This can be any of
+ several locations:
+
+ <ul>
+
+ <li>If you installed rEFInd 0.8.3 or earlier with the default options,
+ or if you used the <tt>--notesp</tt> option with rEFInd 0.8.4 or
+ later, it will be <tt>/EFI/refind</tt> on your main partition</li>
+
+ <li>If you installed rEFInd 0.8.4 or later with the default options, or
+ if you used the <tt>--esp</tt> option with rEFInd 0.8.3 or earlier,
+ it will be in <tt>EFI/refind</tt> or <tt>EFI/BOOT</tt> on the
+ ESP.</li>
+
+ <li>If you used the <tt>--ownhfs</tt> option to <tt>install.sh</tt>,
+ rEFInd will be in the <tt>System/Library/CoreServices</tt>
+ directory on the volume you specified.</li>
+
+ <li>If you installed rEFInd manually, it will be wherever you put
+ it.</li>
+
+ <li>In all cases, there could be duplicate (inactive) rEFInd files in
+ unexpected places. This is particularly true if you tried
+ installing rEFInd multiple times, each with different options to
+ <tt>install.sh</tt>. Thus, if you delete rEFInd and it still comes
+ up, you may have deleted the wrong files. (Note that dragging files
+ to the Trash may have no effect, though—at least, not until
+ you empty the Trash.)</li>
+
+ </ul>