New partition table for Windows 7

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I had Linux installed on my laptop, I decided to install Windows 7. There were several linux partitions, I resized one and formatted it to NTFS, couple left untouched, I decided to merge them during installation into one. When I was installing Windows, I was unable to merge partitions. The question is: how do I create new patition table, i.e. delete all old partitions and create new.

Igor Filippov

Posted 2011-10-31T15:01:46.833

Reputation: 213

you mean, all partitions have linux only. Now you want to remove those and install windows 7. Am I right? – Siva Charan – 2011-10-31T15:37:39.833

Yes, you're right. – Igor Filippov – 2011-10-31T15:40:26.837

Answers

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You don't need to create a new one.
Open up Start -> right-click on Computer.
Choose "Manage".

When the Computer Management window pops up, double-click on Storage.
Then choose Disk Management (local).

Here, you can remove all the Linux partitions (implying you use Windows's boot loader, and not GRUB anymore), and expand the NTFS partition(s) of yours.

Apache

Posted 2011-10-31T15:01:46.833

Reputation: 14 755

I am unable to expand partitions. This option is inactive. Any ideas? – Igor Filippov – 2011-10-31T15:21:41.893

After removing the partitions? (Notice: Remove them entirely. It may happen that an extended partition remains, taking up all the available space. Remove that too.) – Apache – 2011-10-31T16:22:46.577

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With the help FDISK, you can remove & create a partition.

  1. FDISK is MS-DOS Command.
  2. Using this, first remove your unnecessary partition and create a single partition.
  3. Using your Windows 7 CD, install the OS.
  4. After installation, Type Disk Management on Run (you will see "Create & format hard disk partitions") then you can create more partitions as you required.

Refer this URL related to FDISK

Siva Charan

Posted 2011-10-31T15:01:46.833

Reputation: 4 026

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Boot to the Windows setup disk. Choose "Drive options (advanced)" when you get to the "Where do you want to install Windows?" dialog. You can then delete the existing partitions, then either select the empty disk (in which case Windows will partition automatically) or explicitly create partitions as desired.

Harry Johnston

Posted 2011-10-31T15:01:46.833

Reputation: 5 054

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If Windows 7 is already installed, you ought to be able to use the built-in disk management snap in to delete, add, and resize partitions. If not, you can use a tool like GParted Live.

Andrew Lambert

Posted 2011-10-31T15:01:46.833

Reputation: 7 136