 Elmerie asks, hi, I'll just a question, just a question. I want to have learners, so I'm thinking this is teams education sector. I want to have learners complete a questionnaire in a fillable PDF document through teams. What is the best way to do this? Creating an assignment, et cetera, or is there another way? There's always another way. There is. Multiple other ways. Is a fillable PDF ever the right way? I don't think so. You can't do much off the back of it, really. It's like, I always have those questions. We get a question and then I have a question, why? Well, if I just think about that too, to your point, 50 students, let's say, two one or two classes, whatever it is, 50 students and then I have to dig through 50 PDFs to find the responses. Personally, I would be creating a Microsoft form and just dropping a form in and filling out a form. And then on the back end, at least it goes into Excel and it makes it much easier for you to mark and work with. And each one of those can be seen as a, yeah, I don't know, unless they need to be. I think that the downside would be, because with assignments, each one can be individually saved, marked, and then the student can actually draw it down to their desktop as an actual document. So it always comes down to what are they trying to do with it afterwards? Because if that's the case, then doing a form might not be the way to go. So creating an assignment, yes, but a PDF assignment. Yeah, it comes down, but there's also the issue of integration here. I mean, what other systems are they trying to make this work with? I mean, some folks have, you know, Adobe form servers and things that they can process, you know, things like PDFs that most of us in the Microsoft world really don't do too much with other than fill them out. So, but yeah. Yeah. It's clearly it. The products that they have, who knows what they have. And an Adobe would be one, if you don't even have the Adobe functionality, then doing a feelable PDF is not gonna work. Yeah. Right. Well, I mean, my thought is that you're gonna want to aggregate the data, depending on the questions that you have, doing it as a form, be able to look at that. You still have the ability to go in and look at individuals. You can even automate that. You could create that so that you get a notification of all of the people that have not yet completed the form. So there's things that you can do that are pretty simple that are still a lot easier than managing that many PDFs. Well, what about even using OneNote? Because each student can have its own page and they're filling it in on the page and then that can actually still be saved as a document afterwards. It comes down to, I think, the fields. Or are they better off to have a Word document that's got physical fields in it that they have to then fill in that you could put in and maybe do it as a Word document and do it that way. For me, it comes down to the fillable PDF means fields, very specific thing, an area that they want them to drop an answer into. And there's so many other solutions apart from a PDF that might work better. Which is easy. The creation of the form is the easier part. It's what do you want to do with the data afterwards? Yeah, yeah, we'll put it. Yeah, and I mean, is there a reason? Like if I were going to include like an essay question or something, maybe I want the PDF. Maybe I want to have those as a standalone thing. I can print them out, grade them and hand them back or whatever. I mean, there's, again, what is the output? What are you actually trying to achieve? Because there's a number of different ways that you can achieve that, most of which, if it's all going to be electronic, I would never do the PDF, the fillable PDF. I would do a form. Yeah. Ask away, Christian. Okay.