Fat, fatter, and fattest file systems
Q When I view the current partition information on my 8-year-old PC using DOS's fdisk utility, it says the file system is FAT12. When I do the same on my newer PC, it says FAT16. I know about the differences between FAT16 and FAT32, but I can't find much on FAT12. What are the differences between these file systems? - Rick Channing A Not to worry -- FAT12 is merely DOS's way of maximising the available space on your no doubt tiny partition. When you create a partition smaller than about 16Mb with fdisk (in any DOS, Windows 95, or NT version) and then format it, you get 12-bit file allocation table entries -- how the file system keeps track of filenames, attributes, and locations -- instead of the normal 16-bit version. | Category: General Issue: Feb 1998 Pages: 176 |
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