 So we left off on this water audit. I want to show you how to insert a pie chart for this. I'm going to go ahead and get rid of some of these instructions that we had from before. Start a little bit fresh right here. I'm going to do this, what I think is the easiest way, which is to make a new area for the chart. We could even name this area called for the chart, just so we know. And here we'd have sources. And here we'd have something like water usage per source. And then we just use the equals. So this equals that one, and this equals this one. Then here we have equals the sink one, and this equals that total. And now the next four, I can just highlight those two and then drag those four down because those are contiguous. And then equals this dishwasher. And here we'll have equals what that dishwasher has per day. And then we'll drag those down as well. Now that I have those, I can just highlight this. These will change dynamically if we change anything up here. And then I can insert chart. And this is a good graph. This might give you what you want. I think that this might be more fun for us as a pie chart. So we can see it as a total and just have percentages there. We can make this a little bit bigger. Once you're in your chart, you can just start messing around. See how different things look. If you go to Customize, Chart Style, you could maximize it, so make it quite large. You could 3D it, but we won't do that because this 2D data, so you shouldn't represent 2D data with a 3D chart. It'll actually warp it. It'll make this shower look bigger, for instance, than it was. And these things in the back smaller. Under Pie Chart, we can add a donut hole to it. We can put on some borders. Maybe gray borders would be nice. Maybe a little bit darker gray right there. I kind of like that. Change stuff. Now mess around. See what you like. I'm gonna drag this down to right there. And now we have that pie chart. All right, enjoy.