 So that also gets quite a lot more complicated than just kind of allocating the rent over. And like I say, it gets a little bit complicated to figure the basis of the home and the out and then to, and then to think about what that's gonna have on an effect on your basis in the home, if you sell the home and that kind of stuff at a future point. But that's the general idea. Okay, so now let's go back to the renting situation cause it's an easier situation I think and then think about what if we had a loss and then the simplified method. So I've changed it now, so we're back to like renting instead of owning the home, no depreciation. We just got the rent here in our calculation coming out to the 848 that's pulling over to the Schedule C on down below. So let's say that we had a loss on the Schedule C. So I'm gonna go to the Schedule C and say, okay, let's say that the Schedule C is like a break even. Almost break even. But before the business home, so 120,000. So now I've got 120 minus the 120 and nothing's happening with regards to the business use of the home because it basically restricted it. And you can see that over here on the form 8-8-2-6, same form as being populated and calculated but it restricted it and down here on part four, carryover of unallowed expenses to 2023 next year, operating expenses subtract line 27 from 26 if left since zero, so there it is pulling over. Let's say we had just a little bit of income. Let's say the income, let's add like, let's remove like 200 here and just to nail this point home and go to the Schedule C. So now you've got, this was the income before the home use of the office and now it's allowing the 200 here and that's bringing us back down to zero the general idea. So you could see what is happening conceptually. So now it's limited by the 200 and now the carryover is the 648. All right, now this time I forced it to use the simplified method. And you can see it comes out to be far worse using the simplified method. So if I scroll down, I said, I just used the simplified method. So now we've got the simplified method enter the total square footage of your home. We said was the 12,000 and be the part of your home for business use is the 300 use the simplified method and so on, which I believe is just taking that 300 times the $5 and then multiple times, well hold on, it's being limited. Let me go back on over here and say, let's bring our income back up. So we can get a fair comparison here. That's not fair. That's not fair the way you did it, 20,000, okay. And then, so now we've got our income back on the board. Okay, so there we go. So now the simplified method is the 300 times five, right? So 300 times the $5, the 1,500, it's not being limited. The 300 just being the square footage in essence of the office. Now this is actually coming out to be higher because we put a square footage of our business use compared to the full, the ratio was quite small that we used. So you can see you'd wanna do both of these methods because note that you would think that this method, because it's for the whole country, might work out better if you were in a situation where you're in a lower cost of living place and you have to be under the 300 square foot because if it was over 300, I think it's gonna cap it at 300. So for example, if I put this at 500 for my business use, then it still caps it at 300, right? So that's gonna be a limitation as well. And because there's different cost of living within the country, you would think that it would be likely that if you live in a high cost of living area, it might be better to use the actual. So now that I've changed this to 500, it limited to 300, let's go back to the other method. I'm coming up to 1,500 here. And if I use the other method, it would come, we would be coming to 1,213. So let's just increase that a little bit more. Let's say it was, you know, 600. 600. And so now we're at the 1,395. Go back on over and let's say the rent was higher. Let's say the rent was 35,000. So now we've come to 2,145, right? So, and then if I go back on over and I say, okay, let's force the other method, which is where's the forster thing? Where's the forster thing? This method. Then that would still be capping me at the 1,500. So you kind of have to do, they tried to do the simplified method as if you can just pick the simplified method and go, but that actually makes it. So you have to do the comparison between the two methods to try to figure out which method is the best now. So that's the general idea. You can dive into this in a lot more detail to determine, you know, how to exactly calculate the square foot and special situations like inventory, or if you have a separate structure that you need to get into, you can do more research on that. Or if you have a daycare facility in particular, it goes into a lot more special circumstances in that particular situation or industry, which is quite common, you know, business use, a type of business for the business use of the home. So you can dive into those in more detail and research them on the IRS website, irs.gov.