![]() Viewing it in Windows disk management still looks the same as the screenshot above - ie. Note that the total size in those two partitions doesn't add up to 251GB anymore. I tried to delete that 39GB partition with the 'd' command, but now MacOS's disk utility doesn't see this space at all - so the total partition size no longer adds up to the total 251GB disk size! To make things worse, I think I've messed up by trying to delete that space in Mac OS with gdisk. The first 98GB partition should actually now be two partitions - The Mac OS 39GB partition and a 59GB one which I want to delete so I can expand my bootcamp partition. No partition type I choose was viewable by Windows - it only displayed one big partition other than my bootcamp partition. El Capitan seems to display a pie diagram, which always enforces the free space to be filled with a new partition. ![]() The problem was that El Capitan doesn't seem to let you delete a partition and leave the space free. As I mainly use the Bootcamp Windows, I wanted to decrease the Mac partition and increase the bootcamp partition.Ī few articles online said to make the mac partition smaller in mac os, and then go back into windows to resize the Bootcamp partition.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |