 For the Circuit Python Parsec today, I want to show how you can create a Color Helper module. What is this all about? Well, when I'm using Neopixels, I have certain colors that I like to use a lot. I want to reuse these colors and rather than just copy and paste them from some document into my code, what I've done here is created a separate file. It's a separate module and you can see it right here. It's just called JPColors.py. In this, I have defined a bunch of colors that I like to use. So red, green, blue, you'll notice. You'll also see here I've got this amber color that I really like to use a lot, and it's not one that I typically remember. Hey, what exactly is amber? What's a good formula for that? Once you've tuned those and dialed those in once, you can save those variables in a class here. This class I've created is called Color. I've defined a bunch of color values and then I save this as a separate module file on my CircuitPython device. Then you'll see inside of my code.py when I want to use that, I'm simply importing it right here from JPColors, import color. So that imports that class from that module file. Then whenever I want to use colors, I can just simply call them by name down here. So I've created this little function called Chase that creates these nice little chase effects, and the only input that I have to that is, what color chase are we going to do? So if I want to use my amber color, then I say chase color.amber, and the rest is taken care of for me. So I have cyan, magenta red, black, and white. So that is a really simple way that you can create some variables that you want to reuse all over the place in a separate file, and that is how you can create a Color Helper module inside of CircuitPython, and that is your CircuitPython Parsec.