 So Chris says, hi guys, is it possible to create tabs in modern sites? So it's a SharePoint question. I have different list apps and I would like to display them as tabs. So can you create tabs in a modern site? Interesting question. If you're doing stuff in like CMS, like WordPress or Drupal or something, you just expect that stuff to be there, but it doesn't exist in SharePoint. So to do that, you're probably going to need a third-party web part or one of the out-of-the-box ones, which is called jQuery UI. There in that web part, you will have the ability to create the type of accordion-style layout that you like. Have others had experience with this one? Yeah. So jQuery UI definitely work. They got a number of prefab scripts for different UI elements. You can create your own. They allow you to do that, which if you're going to use jQuery UI, I recommend doing that instead of trying to hold out all of jQuery UI. That's overkill. Oh yeah, Mark Hillbilly tabs too, EmRackly. Mark Rackly has a nice solution, but creating tabs is really, it's nothing really difficult in HTML or SharePoint. Just a little CSS with UL tags or something like that. So it's easy to do, of course, SharePoint being a website for lack of a better way to put it. That stuff works, but if you want to get creative, you can go the React route. If you're building SharePoint framework web parts, I'm sure they've got a particular pattern that's ideal for that. I think Norm had put a link in that will probably be in with this. But yeah, there's lots of different ways to do it. If you really want to get snazzy, you can have a third-party product that will lay over the top and can do all kinds of cool things, depending on how fancy and how much money you want to spend. It's the fancy part, that's the real thing. I think with the jQuery UI, one you don't get much in the way of formatting options once you're inside of the accordion area. So when I use it in the past, it was always like, well, I want to change the font to a certain heading style or certain types of formats or add an image. I don't think those types of things exist in the jQuery UI. But it's been a while since I've used it. It's actually been a while since I've used it as well. Basically, you get out of it, which you put into it. If you just want basic tabs, you can probably have them in 10 minutes. If you want something highly stylized and you can tweak the CSS to your heart's content and get what you want out of it. So. I was just thinking, I mean, we're going to include a few of these links as well within the article. Do we need to include a warning if we point people over to Mark Rackley's site? Does there need to be some kind of? I think simply mentioning his name, warrants a legal notice of some sort. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. So it'll be in our own legal disclaimer to specifically when referring over to Mark Rackley's site. Bring back the splash screen. Bring back the splash screen. We need that. I just love that. I love that he wrote this new one, though, that the return of the Hillbilly tabs. So we've got the Hillbilly tabs in the return for the modern stuff, which I just, you know, it's bringing it back. Yeah, well, it's the same budget actors that are involved. Right, right. You know, it's the part two. Yeah, that's right. It's that's the one with Jean-Claude Van Damme, right? It's and Jean-Claude Van Damme. I have a serious question, though, now that you're done making fun of Mark Rackley. Oh, we're never done. It's just a pause. It's just a natural pause. It's an interlude. So Sean was talking about CSS and SharePoint. And so that should bring up an interesting question. If I'm injecting CSS into anywhere in SharePoint, is there anything I need to worry about? Should Microsoft decide to do an update? Everything you need to worry about. The inheritance chain the size of the Empire State Building? I mean, it's, yeah. Yeah, I frequently tell people they shouldn't and they can't. And if they're going to do it, they better be very advanced or hiring somebody to do it because the chain reaction to making those changes a lot of times does things that you don't expect or understand. Yeah, there's definitely a learning curve. You can judge somebody's skill with CSS and SharePoint by their lack of use of the important tag. You get somebody who creates a style sheet that's nothing but important tags to totally override everything. They probably haven't worked with SharePoint before, but there are ways to successfully override other tags and areas effectively. You just understand that you are now in a symbiotic relationship with SharePoint and you got to get along. And if you don't get along, SharePoint will win. It's a car ride with your sibling when you were young. You're going to be smacking each other. The goal is not to have your parents go medieval on you. It's in a vehicle from the 50s pre-seat belt laws as well. Yeah, probably pre-air conditioning too. I'm not touching you, I'm not touching you, I'm not touching you. So I guess everyone's been born to know. Yeah, yeah, but yeah. It's, you know, we're talking about these things as matter-factly, but there is some art to it for sure. The core principles are basic, but doing it right in the right order, that's the real challenge. So never hurts to get some additional help from folks. And I'm sure Rackley's tab or his tabs will provide that level of insight because he's good at giving those pointers. Yeah.