Widget:FAT: Difference between revisions
From COMP15212 Wiki
W81054ch [PHRhYmxlIGNsYXNzPSJ0d3BvcHVwIj48dHI+PHRkIGNsYXNzPSJ0d3BvcHVwLWVudHJ5dGl0bGUiPkdyb3Vwczo8L3RkPjx0ZD51c2VyPGJyIC8+YnVyZWF1Y3JhdDxiciAvPmludGVyZmFjZS1hZG1pbjxiciAvPnN5c29wPGJyIC8+PC90ZD48L3RyPjwvdGFibGU+] (talk | contribs) m (1 revision imported) |
pc>Yuron No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<noinclude> | <noinclude> | ||
This widget demonstrates (broadly) the operation of a File Allocation Table. | |||
[{{canonicalurl:Special:ShowWidget|widget=FAT}} Dark-mode widget for embedding] | |||
{{#widget:FAT}} | {{#widget:FAT}} | ||
</noinclude> | </noinclude> |
Revision as of 16:39, 13 August 2019
This widget demonstrates (broadly) the operation of a File Allocation Table.
Dark-mode widget for embedding
Click on the numbers to replace that directory entry with a file with that many clusters. (‘0’ implicitly deletes the file.) The FAT entries should behave in the way described above.
For simplicity here there is no file appending – i.e. increasing the length of a file already in place – so in each file clusters will always ‘point’ left to right. Nevertheless, you should be able to create some examples of file fragmentation.
Remember: the FAT is a map and each FAT entry has a corresponding cluster of data on the disk.