 I'm gonna show you a way to make Google spreadsheets a bit more fun, more colorful to use. And hopefully by making it more pleasant or enjoyable, you'll actually use it more often. So let me go ahead and show you my screen. And so Google spreadsheet here, I'm just gonna say step one, step two, step three. Let's say I was doing some onboarding for clients or I was tracking my own steps or whatever for something. So let's say I wanted to, you know, every time I did step one, I wanna show up as a different color just to, you know, or show up as a color so that it's not all just black and white. Okay. So what do I do then is I click on the column, select the whole column by clicking on the very top, you know, of the column. And then I click on format, scroll down to conditional formatting, click on that. And then what I can do is very simply say, if the cell is not empty, so if I do conditional formatting, it already defaults to if cell is not empty, but if you need to, you can select. And if cell is not empty, then choose a particular color for the cell. So what I can do is actually select this color picker here to select whatever color I want. So let's say I want the first color to be, you know, orange, all right, light orange, there you go. And then I click done. All right. And by the way, I should show you when I was editing it, it up says what range do you wanna apply to? A1 to A1000 means A1 here, all the way down to A1000, that should be enough. So I'm gonna click on done, but if you ever need to change it, that's how you change it. Okay. And I should show you, if you ever need to change it, right, click on the column where it has conditional formatting, click on format, click on conditional formatting. And here's where you either trash that rule or click on it to make any edits to it. So you wanna choose a different color or something like that. All right, so check this out. If I have done something here, I put a yes, or I put a, you know, smiley face, whatever I wanna put, you know, that color will show up directly immediately like that. And I'll just show you one more example. Let's say I wanna do this format, conditional formatting, and now I wanna choose a different color. All right, let's say yellow, I'll choose this yellow here, a little bit more obvious, same thing, right? Whatever, whatever. Okay, so that's how you do that. Now let's say I wanted to make it, so this is a bit more advanced for those of you who wanna take it a step further. And let's say I want to make it so that it gives me a different shade of the color depending on the number, if it's a low number, high number. So I'm gonna show a few in step three here. Click select the column and format, conditional formatting. And instead of a single color, I'm gonna do color scale, color scale. I'm gonna apply it to this, just the column C here. And the default color scale they give us is from dark green all the way to white. So the minimum number is dark green and the maximum number is white. So let's say I want to, yeah, I'm just gonna show it to you as a very simple example, okay? Dark green to white. I'm gonna click done, I'm gonna access out for now and watch this. So let's say number one, number two, number three. Now see what happening? It's giving me the minimum number is dark green and the maximum number is white. Now, if I just keep adding more numbers, right? It automatically fills in different shades. Isn't that cool? And let's say that I suddenly add a huge number, right? 100. Suddenly, these are, these all turn dark green because these are considered very, very small numbers compared to 100. So, but if I start filling in middle numbers, okay? Then it starts giving me more shades, right? It starts giving me more shades, but most of the column is still weighed down very much by these tiny numbers. That's why it's kind of trending in that direction. But anyway, that's how you do conditional formatting to make your spreadsheets a little bit more fun with some colors. I hope that helps.