 This video describes an alternate solution to lesson 3, practice exercise C. The solution is pretty much the same as the first one up until line 14. Instead of using select layer by attribute and storing its returned feature layer in a variable, this version of the script uses the make feature layer tool to create the feature layer, and it can be referred to later using the string park and ride layer. Looking closely at the parameter supplied in line 14, it's important to note that the first parameter park and ride is specifying the name of a feature class. Found where? Found in the workspace, which we set on line seven to the Washington Geo database. Second parameter is also a string. Except this string is just the name that we're giving to the temporary in memory feature layer that we're creating. So in this version of the script, when we want to write the selected features to disk, we plug in the name that feature layer into the copy feature statement rather than a variable. And likewise, when we want to clean up the feature layer, we again specify that same name as a string rather than a variable.