Certainly. Many (most?) modern hard drives have only one root directory. Only those drives with two or more partitions will have more than one root directory.
Yes, a hard drive can only have one single root directory, which serves as the top-level directory in the file system hierarchy. All other directories and files are organized beneath this root directory. However, within the root directory, multiple subdirectories can exist, allowing for a structured organization of files. This structure is common in file systems like NTFS, FAT32, and others.
No, a drive cannot be a sub directory but it can be a root directory.
C is the root directory in most but where ever the drive on which the windows is installed
Root directory is the highest level directory and this is the directory that appears first on the screen when you start MS-DOS. Generally, 'C' Drive appears on the MS-DOS screen as root directory.
In some operating systems, such as Microsoft Windows systems, there is no single root directory. Rather, there is a separate root directory for each Storage device and partition (i.e., logically independent section) of the hard disk drive HDD. A: for the floppy drive C: for 1st partitionThe root directory is on UNIX OS that contains all other directories and files on the system and which is designated by a forward slash ( / ) on HDD
root directory
It's Root Directory
The root directory.
High-level formatting
root director
Pagefile.sys
Pagefile.sys