 until I get to the 75 to the 7523. So I'm gonna put my cursor on these two. I'm gonna put my cursor on the fill handle and drag it down. And so if I let go, I'm at 65. I'm gonna keep on going until I get to 68. And so I'm gonna go to, there's 69, 71. We've got a lot of buckets here, a lot of buckets. So we'll keep going down to 75. So 75 is the endpoint, is that right? It goes from 75 to 7523. So if I copy one more down, 75 to 7523. So there's our buckets. So now what I'd like to do is make a similar kind of a tab that's gonna be on the x-axis that looks like this, having the range. So we can do that with a little formula. I could type in here, if I don't want a formula, I could put this apostrophe and then I could say this is gonna go from 60.28 and then space or in the dash, maybe 60.51. However, that's kind of tedious to copy that to type that all the way down. So what I could do is do a formula which has text in it by saying equals. And I'm gonna point to this cell and then say we wanna say and because I wanna connect it to another cell, not add it or divide it or create a function to it, but connect it. And then I'm gonna put quotations for the text that's gonna go in the middle, which is just gonna be a dash and the quotation. And then we're gonna say and and then this one. So what this is saying is equals, pick up what's in cell C17 and just put what's in there in it and then and connect it to because I have a text field. We put the quotations around it, a dash between the two and connect it to what is in cell D17, which is that 60.59 and enter. So there we have it. I'm gonna make this a little bit larger. So there we have it. Now we might end up with a problem as I copy this down but that's my general formula. I can take this and copy it down. And so there we have that, boom. Notice it did something funny down here. So now we've got this issue that it did something funny. So how can we fix that? We could say that we wanted to round it to get rid of these decimal places. So for example, if I go into this data right here, if I was to add decimals, it's coming up to something that's actually not exactly rounded to two decimals. So I would like to tell Excel, hey, round it to just two spaces. So the way to do that, I'm gonna double click on this cell. I'm gonna go to the front of it and put in front of it a round function. So I'm gonna say round and then brackets. So now I'm putting that in front and now I've got my argument. There's the argument, which is correct. And then comma, I want you to round it and then to round it to two decimal places, we use a 10. So the 10 represents rounding it to two decimals. So I'm gonna then close that up. And by the way, when you use this function, it gets a little bit tricky to use the 10, how many decimals you're rounding to. But once you get used to it, then it's not too bad to round that out. So then I'm gonna do the same thing for the first one here. I'm gonna put round brackets and then comma and a 10. Brackets and enter. So now we've rounded those two datas. And if I copy that cell all the way down, it looks like a little bit more complex of a formula, but then it takes care of that rounding problem. All right, something happened here. I'm gonna copy this one down. Okay, I think that's good. Okay, and then I'm also gonna do the rounding thing on this one. I should do it from the top down, but I'm gonna say equals round. Whoop, hold on a second. Round brackets, scroll into the left and then comma, 10 brackets. And then this one, double click round brackets, go into the left comma, 10. All right, so there we have it. So now I'm gonna make column E a little bit wider so we can see all the numbers in there. Now that I have my brackets, I want to then select the data from this data set that is in between each of these buckets. And it's used, so we have the beginning and end. So I'd like to have a formula that's going to say something like, if the number is above this number, but below this number, then you want it to be in this bucket. And so also just realize that you could see this number is the same. So we want it to be including, if it's 60, 51, we want it in the top bucket and the bottom bucket, if it's 60, 51, we don't want it here. We want it upper in the top bucket, all right? So let's do our formula in E 17. It's gonna say equals count if, and I'm gonna say ifs with an S, double click the formula. Here's our criteria bar. So if we could highlight that, we could see the criteria. Criteria range, I'm gonna select the entire range up top with the dropdown. There's our range, comma, next argument is the actual criteria. So we're gonna say that this needs to be, I'm gonna use a greater than. So I have to put the quotations, quotation, greater than, quotation, and then and, I've gotta use an and connecting it to the 60. So it's gotta be greater than the 60. That's our first argument. And then comma, the second criteria that we needs to have is the same range, criteria range two, same range, selecting the entire range. And then the criteria for that range, comma, is.