 Welcome, so in the last couple of videos we looked at drawing our own little horizontal lines in scripts, and that was fun, but let's get a little fancier than that. There's a program called Boxes, if you're on a Linux machine, search your repositories, you can use apt, aptitude, aptget, whatever you want, if you're on a Debian based system, or whatever package manager you use. We're going to search for boxes, you can see there's a few options here, and there's one called Boxes. It says right here, it's text mode box and comment drawing filter. You can see I have it installed already, if you didn't, you're going to just sudo apt install boxes if you're on a Debian based system, and that will install it. Once installed, it's very easy to use. For example, I have a file here, it's a text file, it says message.tx, I can cap that out, and you can see it just says welcome, filmsbychrist.com, thank you. Now I can use the boxes command, since I have that installed, and give it that file, and it draws a box around our text. Not too fancy yet, but we could also pipe into that. I can say echo, this is a test, type it into boxes, and it will put it on that, and if I was to give echo the dash E option, I can now put new lines in there. I can say this is a line, new line, new line, another one, new line, test, and you can see it will now put the box around that. Again, not that fancy, but it gets fancy here. Let's go ahead and type boxes again, and do dash L, it will now list out. You can see here, a bunch of different boxes it has built into the application. We can go through here, and you can see like, let's go ahead and pick one, that one looks like fun. You just find the one you want, and just look at the name above it, this one's Ian Jones. Now I can say boxes dash D for the box I want, and then the message that we want to have, so in this case our text file, I'll hit enter on that, and it puts that box around our text. Again, let's go ahead and look at a few more. Oh, here that one looks fun, twisted. So we can find the name, it's just twisted all lowercase, we can go ahead and run this command again, and we can put the word twisted in there. And again we can do the same thing, instead of giving it a text file, I can say echo this is my text, or my test, whatever, and we'll put it in there. We can look at a bunch of other ones around here, you can see some of them are just turned, some of them are pictured, we've got flowers, we've got one called scroll that we can use, Santa, we can do peek with a little guy peeking out the top, nuke, mouse, and it's important, girl, a fence, a dog, a cat, girl with a Santa cap on, boy. So go ahead and give some of these a try, we'll just come in here and I will just say boy, so there's a boy, I can say girl, there's a girl, cat, dog, etc. Now, you could use this in a shell script, the user would have to have boxes installed on their system. When you can you might want to avoid using external applications, obviously if you're writing some sort of program or script you would create some sort of installer package like on a Debian system, a deb file, and make this a dependency and then Linux would install it for you, that's fine, but then you go to other systems, you would have to package it for maybe Apple computers or even Windows, you can run Bash on both of those, Bash is the default shell on Mac OS, last I checked, but doesn't mean that Box is necessarily available, you might have to install it. Now you're getting kind of messy, so if you don't need to dynamically change your text in here, so let's say I wanted this and I wanted this at the top of my program, well I can just take this output and put this into a script and echo it out. You know what I'm saying? So yes, using Box is great, but if you can avoid putting that into your script, if the text isn't going to change, you can still use Boxes to generate it and then just embed that in your script. Again, I hope that you enjoyed this tutorial, I hope you learned something new, visit Filmsbychrist.com, that's Chris of the K, there's a link in the description and I hope that you have a great day.