Quoting Craig Sanders ([email protected]):

> The debian installer (and presumably ubuntu and others) let you switch to
> another console tty with Alt-F2, Alt-F3 etc to get a root shell.  You can
> manually create the partitions you want, then switch back to tty1 to install
> on the partitions you just created.
> 
> IIRC, on debian tty1 is the installer menu, tty2 & tty3 are for shells, and
> tty4 is a log tail of info and error messages etc printed by the installer.

And very handy all the other virtual consoles are, too.  (1994 thanks 
you for that tip, Craig.  ;->  )

Still, I continue to prefer to use a best-of-breed live-CD disk with a 
very recent kernel (maximal hardware support) and highly reliable and
diverse command-line tools for utility purposes such as partitioning and
initial mkfs -- a superior environment for that purpose, IMO, than
distro installers, even ones I like, like Debian's, are ever likely to
furnish.  I therefore also recommend that approach to others.
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