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Unlike Windows, Linux installations are good at accepting other OSs on the same machine and dual-booting. You do end up losing the disk space occupied by Windows of course.
If you don't end up running Windows subsequently you'll be fine. Windows unfortunately is bad at sharing, and sometimes a Windows update can overwrite the GRUB bootloader used by Linux. As long as the machine has a modern UEFI BIOS with a decent boot sequence manager, it's often just as easy to keep the two OSs ignorant of each other and use the BIOS boot menu to either select a boot partition on the fly, or put your preferred OS at the top of the list for auto-boot. |
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