 And let's look at the budget versus actual report, which is a great report as time is passing to see what is happening and your comparison to what you expected to happen. So we're gonna say budget versus actual. Budget versus actual. And so there we have that. And so now this is a quite long report if we're running it for the entire year because it's getting our budget versus the actual for each month of the year. Now we only have two months that we have actual data in it, January. We've got the actual versus the budget and the overview. And then we've got February. And then of course we had a little bit of data in March. And then in April, we don't have any actual data. So for us, as we run this, it would make sense for us to run it for the first two months possibly. So we're going from 01, 01, 23 to 02, 28, 23. And then we could run it. And that's our standard report. We're gonna pull out the trustee calculator just to see some calculations here. So now we've got our January data, February, and then it gives us the total. This is similar if we were to run an income statement kind of like on a side, on a month by month basis as we did here. So now you've got January, February and then the total year to date. So that's how the budget is set up. So if we do a comparison here, we've got the actual, we've got the budget and then we've got the over budget. So I'm gonna take the 53857 minus the 34606. And that's what we're coming up with the 19251, which of course is the budget, which is the over budget. And then we've got the percent of the budget. The percent of the budget is taking the 53, 857 divided by the budgeted amount, 34606. So the actual amount, if I move the decimal two places over about 155.63% of the budget because the actual was over the budget. And then you can do that for the expenses and so on, on down below as well. So you have a couple other options up top. We of course have the date range options that we looked at. We don't have the same kind of comparative options once again, because this is the comparative report comparing the budget, which we manually input versus the actual, which is what we built when we entered the data input for past data, two months in our example problem having been passed at this point in time. You've got the same kind of thing where you have the active cells, rows versus all or zero and so on. And then we've got these items where you can see the default is to have the over budget and the percent of budget. But you can also have, you might choose instead of these two to show it this way. So this is kind of a matter of preference. So now you've got the amount remaining. So now you've got a negative number here for the amount remaining. So in other words, if I was to hit this again and I was to say over budget so we can see both of them. So you've got the amount remaining. Let's see, run it, running. So now you've got the over budget amount remaining. So you can see it either way you wanna see it. And then over here, we've got the remaining amount versus if I hit both of them, these are just basically taking the inverse kind of relationship here. So let's run this again. So now you've got the percent of budget and the amount remaining. So let's pull off the trustee calculator and just take a look at this. If we scroll down, we've got the actual, the budget, the over budget and the amount remaining are the same number. It's just the difference between the actual and the budget. It's just which ones are you subtracting from which one, making it negative or positive. The percent of budget, let's take a look at this one which is just basically looking at, I'm looking at the total income. That's just gonna take the actual which is over the budget right now. So five, three, eight, five, seven divided by the budget which is three, four, six, oh, six. And that's where we get this number. That's over a hundred percent which is the 155.63 because the actual is higher than the budget. The amount remaining, the percent remaining is taking the difference. So we'll take the remaining item which is negative because the actual was over the budget. So we don't have anything remaining from the budget side of things and this might feel a little bit different when we do incomes accounts versus expense accounts but we're gonna say, all right, so this is gonna be the difference of the 19251 divided by the budget of three, four, six, oh, six. Moving the decimal two places over, there's our 55.63 about and so on. So that's the general idea. So notice that you probably wouldn't have both of these items, you know, the over budget and the amount remaining since they are somewhat redundant and you probably wouldn't want both of these percentage items as well, choosing one line or the other. The default as we saw is to have these top ones over budget and percent of budget. Let's see the other side just having the bottom two and run that, make sure I run it. So there it is. So there's the budget versus actual and you can check to look at the total numbers on the right-hand side as well. So that is that. The two budget reports being the budget versus actual and the budget overview.