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The concept of partitioning: To put it simply, a hard disk is placed in a general computer, and a hard disk is generally divided into a primary partition and a logical partition. The main partition is used to install the system, and the conventional one is the C disk; Logical partitions are actually def disks, and these three disks are actually three finer partitions under a logical partition.
In fact, the reinstallation system only needs to move the main partition, i.e. the C drive, and the other partitions do not need to be moved.
After formatting, nothing is put but there is used space, which is actually the space occupied by the file system of each disk.
As for its own increase, I don't know what's going on.,There may be more reasons.,You pay attention to whether it will increase.,Formatting is generally fine.。
As for the driver, it is installed in the system disk, that is, the C disk has nothing to do with the DEF. Of course, the drive on which the hard drive is installed may have something to do with it, but that doesn't affect the capacity of your hard drive
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No, there is space taken up by the System Restore feature. You right-click on my computer--- properties--- System Restore ---"Turn off System Restore on all drives"Just tick the previous tick on the OK, and the next time you start it, those occupied files will disappear.
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You can try it, right-click "Manage" in "My Computer" and select "Disk Management", on the right you can see your drive letter, then select the disk you want to format, and then right-click to see the formatting.
You try it this way.
Vista, pretty much the same!
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Method 1: 1Click the Start button on the desktop, find [Run] and click the pop-up run window, and enter cmd enter in the open column.
Run the Command Character window.
2.Enter format in the Run Command window
The d:u command is entered, forcibly formatted.
If that still doesn't solve the problem, continue to see the methods below.
Method 2: 1First, right-click the computer icon on the desktop, select Properties, and then find Advanced System Settings on the left side of the pop-up window and click it.
Advanced options. 2.Click the Advanced tab in the System Properties dialog box, then click the Settings button in the Performance Working Group, then switch to the Advanced tab in the Performance Options window and click the Virtual Memory Change button.
Performance options. 3.In the list of drives in the virtual memory window, select the partition where the virtual memory (page file) is stored (D) -- select [No paging file], click the [Settings] button, and finally click [OK].
Virtual memory. 4.In the same way, enter the command window, enter the format space d: command enter.
Method 3: Press and hold F8 to enter safe mode at boot, try it in safe mode, if not, format it in DOS mode.
Method 4: Put it into the system disk, enter the installation interface, select the D drive, then press D (delete this partition) and then press L (confirm the deletion), and then create a partition.
Formatting, is to restore the production settings of an object, that is, to retransform the object, format the D disk, there are four ways, with the help of the operation command window, the setting of virtual memory in the computer properties, the safe mode and DOS mode formatting, and put into the system disk to create a partition.
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The D drive cannot be formatted, it must be that the system you installed has some system files in the D drive!
You can format it directly with the PE tool of the USB flash drive, or under the current system you need to put things such as:
Page files, my documents, etc. go to the C drive first and then format the D drive! ~
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SSDs cannot be formatted, partitioned, or read. can all be processed through the card activation tool.
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Use the up and down arrow keys to select the partition you want to format, there is a hint, d is to delete, c is to create, first d and then c is fine, just pay attention to the size when creating.
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When you install the system, you come step by step, and there's an option for disk allocation, there's an advanced option, there's an option for formatting.
If you can't find it, the system does not support formatting, then please delete the hard disk, that is, the def disk, when you reinstall the system, and recreate the assignment, and you will have it step by step.
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There are many ways to do this, the first is to go to the control panel - computer management - disk management after installing the system, delete the def disk and then rebuild it.
If you're talking about doing it with a blue background, you should use an xpcd disk to install it, and delete the def disk there as well and then re-create the def disk.
If you only want to format and don't want to change the size of the disk, then just right-click on the disk in the XP system to have a format.
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Other people's discs come with partitioning and formatting tools, just start it with the disc and run the tool software.
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When installing the system, repartition it... will format all the hard drives
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It just so happens that the disc comes with a partition function, so you'll know when you go in! Tomato's!
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You can do whatever you want under PE, and all PE has PM or DM.
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If it is an installed version of the system, there is an option to format the system disk during installation.
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No formatting is required, it will be automatically formatted when the system is installed.
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Isn't Tomato Garden's ghost one?
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Hello this friend! If all the hard drives on your machine have viruses, it is advisable to reinstall the system. There are several ways to do this:
The first is to solve it thoroughly. Format all hard disks before installing the system; To resize a partition, delete the original partition and repartition it, then go up and install the system.
The second is to solve the system problems first, and then deal with the bad guys. It should be noted that when the system is ready, do not double-click on other hard disks to open, you must first format the partition outside the system disk, after completion, install anti-virus software first, and then install other application software according to your intentions.
Of course, if it is a serious problem and the high grid fails to solve the problem, and the virus still exists, you can consider doing a low grid. However, it is necessary to consider carefully, because the low grid will completely erase all the data on the hard disk and return to the factory state, and in the low grid process, you must not accidentally power failure or unexpected interruption, so as not to cause the hard disk to be scrapped!
Personal opinion for your reference!
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Yes, if you format it, all the files will be gone, and there will be no viruses.
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You delete all the other partitions when you reinstall the system.
Only the C partition is created.
Then in WindowsXP, right-click on my computer, manage, disk management, and there is a logical disk under it, right-click, and create a partition.
This is a solution that doesn't require any 3-party tools.
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Use the installed version of the system disk to install the system,You can format the computer partition when you install it.,It's definitely a clean system after installation.。
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You can first check other disks other than the C disk. Repartition directly, and then open other disks after installing the system.
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In addition to the system disk, other disks will erase all data as long as they are advanced formatted (i.e., general formatting), but there is no guarantee that they will not be re-infected, so the insurance method is to reinstall (but not enter the system), and then perform advanced format on other disks in the DOS environment, which will erase all the data of the entire hard disk.
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No. If you install XP or 2000, one step in the installation step is to format the hard disk, and then you can format it.
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It is recommended to format it with PQ, if you don't want to use it, it is better to install the system first, and then right-click to format it. After installing the system, do not open other disks, and format them directly.
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You can format the def disk under the U disk PE, or you can format the def disk under windows after the system is done, the method is very simple, open my computer (windows7 and 8 computers) right-click to align the drive letter, select format, and follow the prompts.
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When installing the system in PE, it is OK to redivide the disk.
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Right-click on the disk and select Format.
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Trying to change the hard drive mode from AHCI to ATA or vice versa in the BIOS depends on the hard drive mode at the time your system is installed. Usually today's notebooks or brand computers, especially those pre-installed with win7 system, have the default hard disk mode of AHCI.
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Is yours a 32-bit or 64-bit computer???
This is used up 32 in 64,,Doesn't it feel contradictory???
You're looking for a 32-bit one to give it a try.
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Try installing a PE hard disk version, and then format the C drive. It's best to install a flagship version of 64-bit, 32-bit i5 is so versatile that it can't be played.
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0x400110020000100a this error refers to the display rate of the motherboard, which does not match the corresponding system, according to your opinion, the system installation is repeated, as long as the hard disk is all formatted, if it doesn't work, it's 64-bit wrong, of course, you used 32-bit at the beginning, it may only be able to use 32-bit, not cup is 64-bit, you can use 64-bit, your motherboard is not the same as you can't use it, CUP is 64-bit, but you can use 64-bit to process a 32-bit system, so the processing speed will be fast, but it doesn't mean that you can use a 64-bit system, otherwise you should have a 64-bit system when you first installed it.
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After repartitioning the entire hard drive, after formatting!
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I really don't know what you're doing.,Even if you want to install a 64-bit one.,Then it's a flagship.,Is it interesting to have an ordinary family? It should be that your plate is not engraved, you can't take a plate back and forth to try, change a good plate!
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What went wrong? Can you add that?
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