 When you're working with Godot and writing code and you're not sure what something does or how something works, I want you to make use of the documentation. When you're in the script editor, just click here, search help, and it brings up a detailed tree of every single node and every single method within it. So if we want to know what input, what is action just pressed does, you would type in that method name. Then you click open and then here right in your script editor, it tells you it returns a Boolean, it takes two parameters, the action and whether or not it needs to be an exact match, and there's detailed written documentation explaining what it does. So anytime you're writing code or even if you're working with a node, you can just type it in and learn more about it. Like let's learn more about character, body, 2D. So I just typed in character and that came up. You click open and it opens that node with detailed explanation, explaining it with links to the methods that are available and what they do in return. This is going to make learning Godot, writing GD script so much faster and easier than going, searching online, searching YouTube, etc. So read the docs. There's an old internet saying of read the flippant manual, RTFM, and it's usually used in a negative sense when people ask questions and it's totally okay and fine to ask questions. That's how we learn. But I think what I'd love to see myself and anyone learning Godot do is go ahead and search the online docs first, whether it's to learn about a node or learn about a method. And a lot of the times you'll be doing something like, oh, you'll be in here and you'll do input dot, you know, oh, and you kind of go through the methods that are available. Oh, what is what is this to is joy known? Huh? What does that do? Right. And then you just take is joy known, click it, open it, and then read about it. Just a little quick tip, something I think that has helped me as I've been learning Godot and GD script and something that I think could help you is go ahead, read the docs. All right. See you. Bye.