 So Mira here is wondering sometimes, particularly in Todoist, but this could be true for other systems too. So we put something into a project, or should we categorize it under another task as a sub-task, right? Do you actually have an example that comes to mind? Yes. So for me, because it's with, I have my university studies as the project, and then I have individual papers as tasks. Right. But then, like, they're broken down, you know, I need to submit, for example, I've got an essay due next Friday, and I want to get the readings done first, then I do the notes, then I do the drafts, then I do that. And to put it as a project seems like a big thing. It does. That seems like kind of like a, it's almost unnecessarily big. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, I don't want to do dates. Like the due date for the actual completion is not till Friday, but then there are sub-task, like little things that I need to get done for the due each day. So I just noticed I was struggling to totally get that in and make sure I had what I needed to do today. So that's interesting that you actually have, I agree with you, there are due dates for finishing a paper, especially with a big paper, you know, like you said. In that, so yes, in Todoist, for example, you could create sub-tasks under one task with different deadlines. I tried it out and I never liked it. Somehow it was always confusing to me. So if I were in your shoes, I would actually create a project per paper and just have, just then it's very simple. I just have to do, I just have tasks within a project with different due dates. And, you know, thankfully it's not hard to create a project to do is you click on a plus sign and you type in something and now it's a project and now you can put. And once a project is done, once a paper is done and submitted, you can archive the project easily as well. So yeah, I feel like so that's one option. The other option is simply to create a single task and then use comments. That's what I do a lot. Either use comments or use the description field. So let me show you what I mean. So in Todoist, let's say I was saying paper about topic XYZ, right? So that's a big task. And then the due date would be, you know, by 10, 8, read the literature about it, you know, by 10, 15, and make first draft. I would literally just do it like this, you know, and then, and I would put this the first due date would be, you know, I actually, you know, it should it should be the due date should be like, I would I would make it more granular so it's like, by 10, 5, read the first, the first article, you know, 10, 6, read the second article, you know, I would make it more granular, read third article or whatever. 10, 8, finish all articles, you know, like that. And so that way, that way I would schedule it as 10, 5, you know, 10, 5. You'd reschedule it each day. I would reschedule each day and and each day I would come in here and go, yep, I did that I read the first article, and I would just delete it. You know, or I would, you know, if you somehow want to keep it so that you can, you can copy and paste in the future as a template, you could basically have a little I would I would make a little, you know, star star and say done, you know, and I would literally go like this. Oh yeah, I did that and I would just paste it down there. You see what I mean. So this is all in the description field to do is now has something called a description field. Let me see if I can find it find that thing now see. Oh wait, let me sort by prior sort by sort by due date here. So, paper about topic XYZ. There we go. So the description field you can actually see a quick summary of everything in the description field. If it was in the comments, you couldn't see the summary you can only see how many comments there are. You see that. That's the difference between the description field and the comments field. Yeah. Yeah, so hope that helps. Thank you. Thanks.