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Peter
September 20th 04, 02:14 AM
Hi,

I have read quite a bit about the differences between FAT32 and NTFS
but somehow I seem to have missed out on two vital bits of
information.

Please can someone assure me that:-

1. FAT32 and NTFS formatted partitions can co-exist on an XP Pro
system.

2. If they can co-exist, can files me copied/moved from FAT32 to
NTFS and vice versa?

I suppose that what I am trying to convince myself about is that the
form of formatting is simply a matter of storage and that the method
of storage has no effect on the files being stored.

I do realise that the change from FAT32 to NTFS is only reversible
by reformatting.

Thank you,

Peter

Shenan Stanley
September 20th 04, 02:31 AM
Peter wrote:
> I have read quite a bit about the differences between FAT32 and NTFS
> but somehow I seem to have missed out on two vital bits of
> information.
>
> Please can someone assure me that:-
>
> 1. FAT32 and NTFS formatted partitions can co-exist on an XP Pro
> system.
>
> 2. If they can co-exist, can files me copied/moved from FAT32 to
> NTFS and vice versa?
>
> I suppose that what I am trying to convince myself about is that the
> form of formatting is simply a matter of storage and that the method
> of storage has no effect on the files being stored.
>
> I do realise that the change from FAT32 to NTFS is only reversible
> by reformatting.

They can co-exist on a Windows XP system (as well as FAT16) and can be used
interchangeably.

There *is* an effect on the files being stored. With NTFS they now have
file and folder security permissions - meaning that they can be made so that
only certain users/groups on the PC can access them.

--
<- Shenan ->
--
The information is provided "as is", it is suggested you research for
yourself before you take any advice - you are the one ultimately
responsible for your actions/problems/solutions. Know what you are
getting into before you jump in with both feet.

Ronnie Vernon MVP
September 20th 04, 03:22 AM
Peter wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have read quite a bit about the differences between FAT32 and NTFS
> but somehow I seem to have missed out on two vital bits of
> information.
>
> Please can someone assure me that:-
>
> 1. FAT32 and NTFS formatted partitions can co-exist on an XP Pro
> system.
>
> 2. If they can co-exist, can files me copied/moved from FAT32 to
> NTFS and vice versa?
>
> I suppose that what I am trying to convince myself about is that the
> form of formatting is simply a matter of storage and that the method
> of storage has no effect on the files being stored.
>
> I do realise that the change from FAT32 to NTFS is only reversible
> by reformatting.
>
> Thank you,
>

The files can be moved from one format type to the other without any effect
on the files.
An NTFS formatted drive can read a FAT32 drive, but the FAT32 drive cannot
read an NTFS drive.
The real advantage of NTFS is that it implements the security options that
are not available for FAT32.

Another excellent article, on this subject, by MVP Alex Nichol is here:

FAT & NTFS File Systems in Windows XP:
http://aumha.org/win5/a/ntfs.htm

--

Ronnie Vernon
Microsoft MVP
Windows Shell/User

Michael Stevens
September 20th 04, 03:42 AM
"Peter" > wrote in message
...
> Hi,
>
> I have read quite a bit about the differences between FAT32 and NTFS
> but somehow I seem to have missed out on two vital bits of
> information.
>
> Please can someone assure me that:-
>
> 1. FAT32 and NTFS formatted partitions can co-exist on an XP Pro
> system.
>
> 2. If they can co-exist, can files me copied/moved from FAT32 to
> NTFS and vice versa?
>
> I suppose that what I am trying to convince myself about is that the
> form of formatting is simply a matter of storage and that the method
> of storage has no effect on the files being stored.
>
> I do realise that the change from FAT32 to NTFS is only reversible
> by reformatting.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Peter

You would only have a problem if you were dual booting Win 95/98/Me and XP.
XP can read both fat32 and NTFS while Win9x can't read NTFS. The file system
only matters on a dual boot system, not over a network.

--
Michael Stevens MS-MVP XP

http://michaelstevenstech.com
For a better newsgroup experience. Setup a newsreader.
http://michaelstevenstech.com/outlookexpressnewreader.htm

Peter
September 20th 04, 09:36 AM
On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 01:14:15 +0000 (UTC), Peter
> wrote:

>Hi,
>
>I have read quite a bit about the differences between FAT32 and NTFS
>but somehow I seem to have missed out on two vital bits of
>information.
>
>Please can someone assure me that:-
>
>1. FAT32 and NTFS formatted partitions can co-exist on an XP Pro
>system.
>
>2. If they can co-exist, can files me copied/moved from FAT32 to
>NTFS and vice versa?
>
>I suppose that what I am trying to convince myself about is that the
>form of formatting is simply a matter of storage and that the method
>of storage has no effect on the files being stored.
>
>I do realise that the change from FAT32 to NTFS is only reversible
>by reformatting.
>
>Thank you,
>
>Peter

Hi,

Thank you all for coming back so quickly and for being so very
helpful. I do have three primary partitions (XP+XP+Win98) so some
of your guidance has been particularly important.

Thanks again,

Peter

Lil' Dave
September 21st 04, 02:29 AM
"Ronnie Vernon MVP" > wrote in message
...
> Peter wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I have read quite a bit about the differences between FAT32 and NTFS
> > but somehow I seem to have missed out on two vital bits of
> > information.
> >
> > Please can someone assure me that:-
> >
> > 1. FAT32 and NTFS formatted partitions can co-exist on an XP Pro
> > system.
> >
> > 2. If they can co-exist, can files me copied/moved from FAT32 to
> > NTFS and vice versa?
> >
> > I suppose that what I am trying to convince myself about is that the
> > form of formatting is simply a matter of storage and that the method
> > of storage has no effect on the files being stored.
> >
> > I do realise that the change from FAT32 to NTFS is only reversible
> > by reformatting.
> >
> > Thank you,
> >
>
> The files can be moved from one format type to the other without any
effect
> on the files.
> An NTFS formatted drive can read a FAT32 drive, but the FAT32 drive cannot
> read an NTFS drive.
> The real advantage of NTFS is that it implements the security options that
> are not available for FAT32.
>
> Another excellent article, on this subject, by MVP Alex Nichol is here:
>
> FAT & NTFS File Systems in Windows XP:
> http://aumha.org/win5/a/ntfs.htm
>
> --
>
> Ronnie Vernon
> Microsoft MVP
> Windows Shell/User
>
"Drives" cannot read partitions or drives. The operating system does that.

Bruce Chambers
September 21st 04, 02:59 AM
Peter wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have read quite a bit about the differences between FAT32 and NTFS
> but somehow I seem to have missed out on two vital bits of
> information.
>
> Please can someone assure me that:-
>
> 1. FAT32 and NTFS formatted partitions can co-exist on an XP Pro
> system.
>
> 2. If they can co-exist, can files me copied/moved from FAT32 to
> NTFS and vice versa?
>
> I suppose that what I am trying to convince myself about is that the
> form of formatting is simply a matter of storage and that the method
> of storage has no effect on the files being stored.
>
> I do realise that the change from FAT32 to NTFS is only reversible
> by reformatting.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Peter


WinXP can read FAT12 (the file system used on 3.5" diskettes),
FAT16, FAT32, CDFS (the file system used on most CDs), and NTFS with
equal facility. Further, the file system on any one disk/partition or
diskette has absolutely no affect upon the operating system's ability
to read other compatible file systems on other disks/partitions.

--

Bruce Chambers

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