 So in other words, I could set this expense account up as an other income account which will pull it up to here and record it as a negative and make our income statement a little bit shorter without having to have two subtotal categories. Let me show you what I mean. If we go to the chart of accounts again and I right click on the interest expense and we say we want to edit the account, edit the account, we can say let's make it other income. It seems unnatural because it's an expense account but it's going to be a negative other income account in that category down below. So we're going to say yes and so let's go to profit and loss. Now the double entry accounting system still has to work out. It's not like you're going to mess up net income because QuickBooks is going to force the double entry accounting system to work. We're still at the same net income but now we've only got this one other category. So this subtotal isn't really giving us any more detail other income. It's really other income slash expenses, income represented with positive numbers, expenses with negative numbers and there's our net subtotal. So it's a little bit off because of the name that it has here as other subcategory but it gives you just one subcategory instead of two down below which is a quite common way to format it and it makes your income statement a little less gaudy or a little less long with all the stuff. And you can have that same principle if you had unearned revenue might go to here, anything that you don't think is going to be repetitive into the future you might want to put down in the other income and expense category because when you do a comparative income statement comparing this month to the following month then you don't want to really be comparing things that you don't think are going to be continuing on into the future. It's not going to help you to project into the future and do your budgeting.