Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Is it true that if i format concrete disk the space surrounded by the disk find reduced?
Is it true that if i format concrete disk the space surrounded by the disk find reduced?
Yes, it is because some disk space is used for the File Allocation table (FAT). That is approaching the index of a book - so the computer can find where everything is on the disk. The newer complicated drives use a different system. My laptop uses the new system for one divider and FAT for another partition. In the second screen is a copy of XP and all the stuff that come with the computer originally. A formatted complicated drive uses about 5% for the FAT.
not true.
Not that I'm aware of.
The space on the disk remains exactly one and the same.
The space that you can use either remains exactly duplicate (if the disk was already formatted) or get bigger (if the disk was unformated) as you can't use an unformatted disk. If it get a little smaller it's because tracks enjoy been well-defined as faulty, but you couldn't use that space reliably anyway.
The formatted space is smaller than the unprocessed disk space, that's because of the formatting.
If you draw lines on a blank sheet of A4 paper will the dissertation size be reduced?
wat?
no
come on thats like comp 101
first time too
I learned that contained by junior high man
it in recent times deletes everything on it
When you purchase a rock-hard drive you will note they are a few megabytes short of a see this is normal also the separator & original formatting must use a tiny tiny bit of space
the plus of formating now is you will use impossible to tell apart space & have a verbs hard drive so the answer is NO
If you format your tough disk, the space never gets smaller quantity. Formatting your hard disk simply routine deleting/removing everything in it.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment