 The reason, what Pete's describing is, is the, like he said in either system settings or preferences in keyboard shortcuts, app shortcuts, you can create your own keyboard shortcuts for any item that appears in any menu. And so when you are in an app, Command P brings you to the print dialogue, as I think most of us probably know. What Pete is doing is adding a menu shortcut for this new menu that appears in the print dialogue and assigning that also to Command P, so that he doesn't have to do anything different. He just says Command P. The first time he does Command P, it brings up the print dialogue. The second time he does Command P, while the print dialogue is up, it chooses save as PDF. And you could do this with anything. Like I have, I have that same shortcut set to our PDF. We have an Apple script that we wrote that puts that PDF into notes as a PDF. And then that's what we share here. And by the way, my other script is working now. I got it, I got it working. So I can archive notes. Yeah, it's great. There you go. Yeah. So you can get it to save as post-script or anything like that. Correct. You can choose whatever you want. Whichever menu selection, correct. And I added a second one there to mail a PDF. So I can do Command P, Command M, and it now mails that PDF. Because whatever's in that menu, you can do. And again, this isn't limited to the PDF dialogue or the print dialogue, rather. Anything in any menu that you use a lot that doesn't have a menu shortcut, you can add one in system preferences or settings, keyboard, shortcuts, app shortcuts. So that's the key there. So yeah.