 After I click on update, we can see that the different points appear on the map. This represents the number of malaria tests that are positive in each facility. If I hover over one of these points, I can see the value for the number of malaria tests that are positive within that particular facility. We can see that there is a legend on the right side. This gives us a breakdown of how the points represent the data. We can see that this lighter color here at the top represents the values starting from 34 all the way to 4700. We can see that this darker value at the bottom starts to represent those values that are greater than 18,948. We can see also that those values that are lighter in color are smaller in size. Likewise, those values that are darker are larger in size. This is defined by the low and high color size in our options. If we change this and make it something different and then update our map, we can see that those points representing those colors that are higher in value become larger. We can also see that this legend is separated into five classes. This is determined based on the number of classes we've defined in our Thematic Layer 1 options. We've currently defined five classes. Let's increase this and see what effect this has. You can see when I increase the number of classes, the points on the legend increase before we had five points on the legend scale. Now we have seven points on the legend scale and the values that they represent are changed. Now the first color represents 34 to 3400+. This is different from our value before when we had five classes. We can also discuss the method a little bit more. Right now, the method is equal intervals. This means that the interval within the legend tries to be equal. We can see there's roughly a difference of 3500 between each of the points on the legend scale. For example, here we have 34 to 3400+, 3400+, 6,789, 6,789 to 10,000+. This is roughly a difference of 3400 between each point on this legend scale. It's not equal, of course, but it's trying to maintain some semblance of equality between each interval on the legend scale. If we change this to equal counts and update, you can see that what it tries to do now is have an equal number of values within each legend point. Before it separated the data based on an interval, regardless of how many values belonged to that legend point within our legend. Now it is trying to have an equal number of values belonging to each legend point. We can see here, for example, at the lowest end we have values of 34 to 427. This has 24 data values associated with that legend. The next value is 427 to 1077. The differences between these two are not exactly equivalent, but the number of values within this scale is trying to be equal between each interval. We can see, for example, at the top we have a scale of 6,533 to 23,677. Here we have a difference that is much greater than that small difference of 400 between the start and end point of these data values representing this point on the legend scale. So when we're defining the legends in our options, we should think about how this applies to our map a little bit more. In particular, how this affects the data values that will be displayed on the map. We'll just reset this to 5, and we'll show you the effect it has. See that it's still trying to maintain an equal number of counts within each of these points on the legend scale.