If you are a new machine, I suggest that everyone except your C disk and another disk that may be used to ghost the other disks are formatted as NTFS, because the directly formatted NTFS is higher than the FAT32 NTFS performance, and the reason why keeping the C disk in the FAT32 format is only a suggestion, A friend who has experience installing systems under DOS may experience it. Plus, if you've been using only light drives to install the system, and you don't need to use DOS, then all NTFS is the best!
But if your partitions have been used for a long time and you just want to convert one of the FAT32 partitions to NTFS for data that is not formatted, just look at the following method!
Suppose you want to convert your F-disk
Click "Start"--> run---> enter cmd, and then press ENTER, a command prompt appears
At the command prompt, enter "CONVERT F:/fs:ntfs" (excluding quotes, note that you leave a space after CONVERT), you will be prompted when you enter, and then follow the prompts to do so.
If your disk changed its name, the system will ask you to enter the current disk volume label, which is the name you changed, such as f disk, you have changed the disk name to the "game", then the label is the game
Note: after conversion command input, if you turn the disk is in use, the system will prompt, conversion will be restarted after you restart the machine automatically run, the next reboot will be automatically converted to complete.