You may find that the partition in Vista must be in the 3 + 1 format (although it can be converted to 1 + 1 using third-party software ). What are the special characteristics of partitions in Vista?
When you reinstall the system, format the new hard disk (if the previous hard disk is faulty, change it to a new one ). There are three primary partitions, one logical partition.
So when installing the system, I can see that this situation is directly divided into a partition. The other three partitions are partitioned after the system, and a primary partition (including the C disk) appears during the system partition ). So:
1. are three primary partitions normal?
2. Is there only one better primary partition?
3. How can I replace the other two primary partitions with logical partitions in the system?
Partitions In the Vista system are special.
In the system, the partition must be four, three primary partitions, and one extended partition (one hard disk can only have four partitions ). The D and E disks we mentioned earlier are just a logical drive in the extended partition. However, Windows XP or earlier Windows System partitions are random and can be divided into one primary partition and one extended partition, or three primary partitions plus one extended partition.
The more partitions, the better. You can only have four partitions (3 primary partitions + 1 extended partition) (1 primary partition + 1 extended partition) (2 primary partitions + 1 extended partition ). As you can see from the second point, there can be three primary partitions, but only one extended partition can be, but more logical drives can be created in this extended partition.