
Is this process correct? Is creating a 2nd EFI partition for Manjaro necessary? I stepped into many articles stating there shouldn't be 2 EFI partitions on the same hard disk or that you could use Windows EFI partition. Put "sudo efibootmgr" on the terminal to verify there is a Manjaro entry.On Computer Management, you should select Storage and choose Disk Management. Create swap partition with the flag "swap". The following steps are for a Windows XP User: You should click on Start, click Run, and then type 'compmgmt.msc.' You have to press Enter or click on OK so that you can open up the Computer Management page.Create 2 ext4 partitions for root and home with mountpoints "/" and "/home".

CREATE BOOT PARTITION WINDOWS 10 LINUX INSTALL
Plug in a USB with Windows 10 and install Windows 10.Create 2 ntfs partitions for Windows 10 and data.Create a 512 MB FAT32 EFI partition for Windows.Use a GParted live usb stick to boot to GParted.Disable Legacy and Secure Boot from UEFI.

What I am planning to do when my new SSD arrives: I would like to keep the same partition scheme on my new hard disk but I have some questions. My previous partition scheme on my BIOS laptop was: My new laptop uses UEFI instead of BIOS, and I have never used UEFI before. The partitioning may need rework due to single file inside Windows ISO is larger than 4G.

sudo fdisk /dev/sdy The commands in fdisk is as follows. I ordered a 1 TB SSD which will arrive in a few days hopefully. Then use fdisk to create the filesystem needed for the Windows ISO (replace X with device letter from above).
