 If we're mass producing fruit punch, unless it's like some customized production of fruit punch, I would think would be a process cost, because all the end result would probably be all the same. We'd be using to maximize production, so probably not that. See yogurt. Again, I would think the same thing. I would think that we're trying to make all the yogurt the same, and once we get the process down, the system down, we can mass produce it and make it all the same and use a process cost. See seeds for planting. And a little bit, we might have to do something on it, but I would think that all the seeds are pretty much the same. We're going to try to make a system to make all the seeds the same and gather the seeds and have the same amount of seeds in a certain basket or whatever. And so I would think that would still be a process cost and not a job cost. And then Ease has small gardening tools. And as long as if they're small and they're all the same and we're making them or producing them, again, I would think that we would make those all in the process cost. So this is one. So I don't think it's that this is one that didn't use customization. If we saw the word customized something and we make customized something, then that's usually for sure going to be a job cost. This one is a general contractor, which by the nature of being a contractor is typically going to be different. So contracting is a little bit different the way the jobs are tracked, but it's a job cost system and all the jobs are typically different. So I think A would be the final answer. Let's go through it one last time. Which industry would use a job costing system? A, a general contractor. Next question. Cost accounting systems are A, job order costing and perpetual costing, B, job order costing and job hunting system, C, job order costing and specific identification, D, job order costing and process costing, E, job order costing and first in, first out. So let's go through this again using the process of elimination. Cost accounting systems are now all of them have job order costing. So I mean this first half is pretty much a given, so we don't really even need to read that anymore and we're really just saying, okay, what's the second, what's the second half here? And A says perpetual accounting. We may have heard perpetual accounting, I mean that's a thing kind of we've probably heard perpetual system before, so I'll keep that for now. C says job hunting system and that sounds just kind of silly. Job hunting system sounds like it's something that was made up because they ran out of options or something. So I think that one probably not it. And C says specific identification, we may have heard specific identification but that actually has to do with tracking inventory in a merchandising company typically where we specifically identify the inventory as it goes. So it's actually that's not going to typically be a cost, a typical cost accounting, it's more of a merchandising usually. D says process costing and again we may have, that sounds familiar so I'll keep that one for now and E says first in, first out and again we probably heard a first in, first out but it's not usually a cost accounting system, first in, first out is how we track again like specific identification in a merchandising company typically. It's some kind of cost flow assumption. So I don't think it's going to be first in, first out. So let's go through this again. Cost accounting systems are job costs and what's the other one perpetual costing. That's kind of alluding to perpetual versus periodic which has to do oftentimes again with a merchandising company has that option. So it's not going to be that specific identification has to do with typically how we're tracking the inventory in a merchandising company and then of course it's going to be the process costing. So it's a job cost system and a process cost system. Those are the two that we're always contrasting when we think of a job cost system or when we think of a job process cost, whichever one we're working on we're often going to be asked questions or thinking about its opposite or the other one comparing and contrasting to the other one. So we're always thinking between job cost, process cost, the difference of course being the differentiation typically in inventory and other differences that result from it.