 which is just gonna be the results because the buckets are the same. So I'm gonna just then say, let's hit the add data and then we'll call the series name. I'll just say W and then we pick up the data. And again, we just need the data size. We don't need the buckets. So I'm just gonna select the data here in BT two and control shift down. That's the entire data. So I'm gonna say, okay. And so now we've got these two data series and I'm gonna say, okay, let's see what that does. And now we've got these two that have been populated on the same graph. So that, which makes kind of sense. So now we've got this one, right? We can see the middle point here is at the 64 about, which you'll recall if we go over to our histogram for the women's data around 64, the histogram for the men or the whole thing, imagine men 67. So the second middle point is around that 67, right? So obviously this one is very, very similar looking because we just basically took the two data sets and multiplied one data set times 0.95, but you could see how they would be, how you could basically plot two line items on the same graph. Now, once we have these, you might then want some labels on something like this. So we might then go, okay, let's see if I can say the plus button and we might want a legend for this one. So we could add a legend. So we've got series one and series two and then within the legend, we could rename those datas. So if I go into the chart design and I say select data, then I can rename the series names up here by editing series one, which I might want to edit and just call it men and then okay, and then series two, edit and call the name women or you might take it actually from here as well and say, okay, that'd probably be a better way to do it. So there we have that and then you could do the same formatting with your datas and make them a little bit wider if you wanted to. So you could go into your data and we can go into the width and see if I can change it to 0.25. And so now it's changing one line at a time. So sometimes it gets a little finicky, control Z, control to change the data of all of the data set when you have multiple items on it. So there I was able to adjust it a little to make it a little bit wider over there. So you can kind of tinker with that, but you can see here that they have them spaced out so you can see the two on the overlap. Now you could select the datas and change the fill color of the data so that it's a lighter data set if you so choose or you can have the no fill solid fill and adjust that the gradient fill. So you might choose different fill patterns which could help with basically the overlap. So here's different fill patterns that you can have that might help to emphasize one of the data sets versus the other data set. So you can play with those and automatic so those are the those are the, so I'll stop it here so we don't run too long, but you have the normal kind of formatting tools. It's just when you have two, the two data sets on one graph, then you might do some of the tools to kind of highlight one data set versus the other data set. You might play more with the colors of the data set on them. So let's go back on over here and just do our normal formatting. I'm gonna select the entire data set and let's just make it blue and bold some or blue and bordered, home tab font group border and then blue. And then let's select this data set and do the same thing. I'll just say font blue and border. And so that looks good. And then over here, we just took that whole data set, so that looks good. So that's the general idea.