 Okay, so the greater of colon subtotal, either the itemized deductions, I'm gonna put those two on an internal bit right here, a subcategory, that's what the colon means. It means there's gonna be, I'm gonna pull these inside in here and then have a total outside, which will take the greater of the two, in essence. So itemized deductions, or the standard deduction. And then the standard deduction, I'll put a little asterisk because it's gonna be coming from a worksheet. Now the itemized deduction, let's indent this as well, home tab and then alignment and indent it, because it's gonna be one or the other of these two. The itemized deductions come from the schedule A, so we will create another worksheet for that, but we don't have anything in there right now, so I'm just gonna put zero. We will continue to build this later. The standard deductions is gonna come basically from a worksheet. Now you can get this in essence from this table right here. Here are the standard deductions for single, married, head of household. So these deductions tie into the filing status. So I can put a little worksheet down here and then again, you can get more or less sophisticated with this, but I'm gonna put it down here on, let's put it just for now on 21, I'll put it down here and say these are the standard deductions, colon. And I'm gonna say if they were single or married, filing, separate, which is M-F-S, that's the shorthand for married, filing, separate, dedu. Then let's put that over, could I make this a little bit wider? Let's put it over here, 13, 8, 50. That comes from our table, so 13, 8, 50. All right, and then this is gonna be head or let's say married, filing, joint. And that's often abbreviated as M-F-J. And that's gonna be, you could think of it as this, hold on a second, this is not right, 13, 8, 50. And then this is gonna be that times two, 27, 700. That helps you to kind of memorize it. If you can memorize this number, you can say, okay, then it's doubled for married. And then we can say head of household, often abbreviated H-O-H is gonna be in between at 20,800. So that's the 20,800. Now, if you're filing a 1040S-R, they have these added brackets down here for single, married. So if certain conditions are met, which we'll talk about later, but I'll try to put a little thing in here. So if they say over 65 or blind, for, I'll put this up top, married, filing, joint, and single or head of household, then you have another 1850 and 1500 per person.