 Let's say, for example, I've got this slide, placing your orders for additional items. You notice I've already got the bulleted list already built out, but I want to flesh it out a little bit more, so verify payment information, for example. Well, since we're talking about our community-supported agriculture, we've got a few different ways that we can handle payment. I want to actually come into this bulleted list and I want to just specify that. When I hit enter, you notice how that kind of dot that I have appears on the same line as my verified payment information. This is a problem because clearly I want to give a little bit of organizational structure to my bulleted list. To do that, we have two different options. The first one is I can select this increase list level button right here, which will do that for me, or I can actually hit the tab key on my keyboard. Both are actually going to do the exact same thing. Now, what I can do is I can come in and I can start to type my information, so how I can place my order, so we can use our credit card, we can use our debit card, or we could do, say, check or cash at the farm. Because we're feeling super hip and we're trying to be hip with the times these days, we're going to also accept Bitcoin. Why not? But you notice now I've added in a lot of this information. What happens if I wanted to get out of this? Well, if I hit enter again, you notice I'm still stuck on that same line. I have two different options. I could come in here and I could click the decrease list level button, and that will do the opposite of what we just did, which was going from the left inward. Now we're going from the left outward. The other thing we can do is we can actually hold our keyboard, holding the shift key, and then pressing tab. We'll actually do that same thing for us. I can now add in, you know, question mark, question mark, question mark, whatever I would need to inside of my list.