 Alright, so we're just going to basically create our income tax formula and then we'll color code it and make it a little bit fancy and then we'll make other tabs. This will be a work in progress as we go through our practice problems so that we can have tabs that will feed into each of these line items. Let's go back to the first tab, our practice tab and let's just look at a tax software. Now if you don't have access to the tax software, that's okay. You can look at the same form in the form at the IRS website, irs.gov, irs.gov. But if you do have software, it's a great tool to run scenarios with. So I'm going to look at a baseline tax return to just build our basic formula. So we have Adam Taxman who's just trying to avoid the dang Taxman and then where's the single filer we'll start off with earning 100,000, we're just going to start with a nice even number for the W-2 income, single filer will just take the standard deduction to start off with and that gives us our taxable income. The bottom of the income statement, basically income statement, part of the tax return and then we got the taxes and credits on the second page. Now in LASERT, they give us a nice little tax summary over here which is basically kind of like our worksheet that we're putting together in a formula basis. So we're going to mirror in essence this kind of format in Excel. All right, let's go on over to Excel. Now what I like to do is basically format the whole thing first. So first I'm zoomed in, I hold down control, I zoomed in on the scroll wheel currently at 295 on the zoom in. I'm going to select the triangle up top, right click on the selected area and we're going to format the cells. And then I typically like to make it currency, negative numbers bracketed and red. Don't want the dollar signs because they just cloud things up. We don't really need the pennies, the decimals, so I usually remove them because we round things typically for taxes. Let's go ahead and say, okay, I'm also in the home tab up top in the font group. I'm going to make it bold. You might not need to do that yourself but I like to be bold because my producer says that I need to be bold when I'm on camera here because that's how you get views on the social platforms and whatnot. You've got to be bold, man. So that's as bold as we can do it. So then I'm going to make the column A skinny and let's make a column A skinny. And I'm also going to type up here it's going to be the tax formula, let's say 2023. And then I'm going to select from A on over to D. I'm not going to worry that it's hanging over the cell right now, but I do want to show that it's a header. I usually do that by going to the home tab font group, dropping down the bucket black and then on the lettering white. So that's going to show that it's a header for us. I'll center it later. I'll deal with that later. I'm going to put my formulas over here. That's why I made this a skinny so I can put plus or minus. And then I'm going to say that my tax formula starts here. We start with income. Now income, there's a lot of sources of income.