 Let's, let's, we started with a quick tip from Skyler. Let's, let's keep going with quick tips from Jeff is the next one. He says, have you ever wanted to copy the path to a file to the clipboard? Here's a quick way to do it. And by path, he means the text based representation of what folders that file is in. He says, open a finder window and navigate to the location of the file. Right click or control click on the file to display the context menu. With the context menu displayed, hold down the option key, and you will find that there is now an option to copy the file as path name. Click it. And now on your clipboard is the path to the file. If you don't want to right click or control click, I believe you can find this in the edit menu when you're in the finder. Uh, yeah, if you just open up highlight anything in the finder, open up the edit menu and then as you press down the option key, you will see it will be copy it without the option key down. It's copy with the file name and with the option key down, it's copy file name as path name. So that's pretty good one. I like that. Very cool. Thank you, Jeff. This is, I love, I had no idea about any of this. This is what I, this is what I love. And here's another one that I didn't expect to happen, but it happened. So if you do a get info on a file, you get a window with a whole bunch of information about the file. If you right click on where you get a copy as path name, kind of like this. Oh, look at that. Got a level higher. So amazing. Oh, right. Can you getting the, you're getting the path name to the folder when you do that, not to the file itself. Interesting.