You don't use Windows partitions. Remove the partitions you don't use and leave the free space as unpartitioned
Sorry ,but can you guide through it in a bit more detail? What with shrink volume thing then?
https://www.tecmint.com/install-fedora-with-windows-dual-boot/ here is an OKish step by step guide. Note this might contain some outdated information so please double check all steps
After you delete those empty partitions you'll have some GBs of unpartitioned space. When you install Fedora you choose that empty space and it will partition properly. Windows is unable to prepare partitions for Linux
Ohkk, how much should i use for fedora?
It depends on you, the minimum would be 20 or 30 GB Apart this you need your space where to save your things, documents, downloaded files or whatever you use.
Ohkk ,and 1. what about the remaining discs on that partition, i can add it to E ? 2. The space that i use for fedora is fixed , right? I cant change it later. Isn't there some dynamic allocation or smth, i think its in VMs
1. partitions are on disks, not disks on partitions. What remaining thing are you talking about exactly? 2. Yeah, "low-level" partitions are somewhat fixed, although "higher-level" / virtual partitions, like offered by LVM2 which is typically used on modern Linux, are resizable. But this is unfortunately not compatible between OSes (Windows will always "see" one huge partition, not the smaller virtual ones inside it) and always a bit tricky to do (one error and your OS and data are screwed), so it's better to choose the right partitioning first.
Actually you have a lot of space unused. The 200 GBs actually set for G: can be used for 40 GB for Fedora and leave the rest actually unused. When you need more space for Linux or Windows you decide what to do, you won't lose it
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