Floseste"Gparted". It's the best. It's FREE!
Even the Gparted does not show the new size for a spare or anything.
As expected from a program run on Linux, Gparted supports ext2, ext3, and ext4 with FAT16, NTFS, FAT32,
and many other file systems.
As expected from a program meant to be run on Linux, Gparted supports ext2, ext3 and ext4 alongside NTFS, FAT16,
FAT32 and many other file systems.
Gparted is a powerful, free and open-source(FOSS)
partition editor for Linux-based systems, but can also be used on Macs or Windows PCs by booting from Gparted Live.
The program works very well with NTFS because of the Linux NTFS-3G
NTFS filesystem driver that allows programs like Gparted to work with Windows volumes without any data loss.
The program works very well with NTFS due to the Linux NTFS-3G NTFS
file system driver that allows programs such as Gparted to work with Windows versions without any data loss.
Yes, of course I can, if I'm not mistaken there is an ISO image that contains only a tool to format and partition management, is open source(free)
and is called Gparted, burn the ISO image Bootz on it and formatted in NTFS.