 Melinda has a question. I have a question about a document library. A few months ago, I set up a document library at work for policy and governance documents. The default public view is gallery that sorts by the document types, so directives, guidebooks, instructions, etc. Although it looks pretty good, I want to make it more usable by being able to quickly list the documents by their policy number, so directive 100, 101, 102. Any suggestions about how to set up the site that will still display the icons, but include a feature that is more user-friendly and allow visitors to intuitively find the document they are seeking? Sharon, you should give your answer first that I see in the notes, because yours is the simple way, and I'll get mine. Not the complexity that Max is going to come up with. When we talk about document libraries, one of the things a lot of people don't realize is that, much like Liz, you can add columns of metadata that can then be group filtered and sorted into views. In a perfect world, since we already know some information around this, we know what the document type is, we know what the policy number is, we might know a little bit more information, so you would then set a column up for each of those pieces of metadata, so set one up for policy, one up for type, whatever other kind of information you have, and then you could basically filter the view, so that it is grouped by or sorted by that information. Then the fun part is you can then take that information, because a lot of times people get really confused when they go to a library to find something, so you can take that specific view, you can put it on the dedicated page that people can't mess with or they're going to see what that information is, see it the way they want to. In addition, you can also use multiple web parts now even on modern pages to do filtered look-ups, so essentially you can have two, you can have one with the library below, one with a filter option above, where they can basically see I want to see this policy, it'll narrow the filtered view down to that particular policy and be able to see it. It's a fairly simple and easy solution to allow them to see what they want to see the way they want to see it. That is an awesome answer and I'm going to build on it. What if you want to go further? What if you say, you know what? I want this to look just a little bit different. I want the layout to look different. I wanted to go to 11, Max. I wanted to go to 11, I wanted the details, I want pretty icons. Well, as Sharon pointed out, the library is just a list and we can customize views. When you go to your views, there's a little button that says Format Current View, and you from there with a little bit of JSON, which is a scripting language. If you will, you can make your document library look like whatever you want to. Our friends over in the SharePoint PNP world, Dave Warner being a major contributor over there, have come up with, I'm scrolling through the GitHub right now and probably close to 100 different samples of codes for how to customize the view of your Lister library. If you look at those and you've got a technical mind, you can merge different components together, and you can make something look pretty interesting. This has been Pimp Your View by Max Fritz. But, seriously, check out the view. That would be the best thing ever, Pimp Your View. We have to do a feature called Pimp Your View. That would be so awesome. Of course, that button would be like glittering and flashing. Oh, my God. That sounds like such a great show. It's like the bedazzled feature. I think in every Dave Warner session known to me in, I have pimped some of my views, and I really do think that'd be amazing. It's a great session title, Pimp My View, and then do nothing but talk about it. Ibs. Do it. Pimp My View, and it's a class on JSON. Max and I are going to do a Pimp My View session. Max, you're now roped into this. We're totally doing it. Absolutely.