• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

What do you do for format a: /s

ahsia

Golden Member
You can create bootable floppies in Windows 9x by typing in:

format a: /s

After Windows ME and 2K, that option no longer works. What do I do to create just a bootable floppy? I don't want all the junk a Windows 98 Startup Disk gives you.

Thanks!
 
Not sure about W2K but in XP open windows explorer, right click your floppy drive, select format, format options, select "make an MS-DOS statup disk"
 
im not using win2k or me right now so i cant verify, but cant you go to format floppy and check the "copy system files" box?
 
Or you can copy the format.exe file to your hard drive and use that perhaps. Personally I just either use format /s for a barebones boot disk, or take the disk over to a win 98 machine and create a windows boot disk (the advantage of this option is that I get CD rom support when booting in dos).
 


<< im not using win2k or me right now so i cant verify, but cant you go to format floppy and check the "copy system files" box? >>



Nope...
 


<< Your easiest solution is to download a premade bootdisk from bootdisk.com. >>



I know about bootdisk.com, but what I really want is a way to create bootable floppies without all the other stuff like FDISK, FORMAT, etc., etc.

I know you can do it in Windows 9x, but in Windows 2000, you can't do either format a: /s or choose "copy system files". Anybody else?
 
I don't think there's a built in solution for W2K. Remember, W2K is not DOS based, so they didn't throw in the ability to make a DOS based boot disk.

Thankfully XP rectified that.
 
In Windows ME you can just copy the io.sys and command.com files from c:\windows\command\
to a floppy. I've done that many times, works great.
 
Back
Top