 For the Circuit Python Parsec today, I wanted to show you how you can use split to split a string into a series of strings based on a separator. So this is useful for cases where you have things like comma separated lists or other messages such as GPS data, where you have strings that you want to kind of chop up into pieces and use those in a sensible way by putting them into a list, which you can then use list filtering and management of those items. So here's how we're going to do it. You can see here, I am creating a variable called sentence, and it's just this text string. This is a neat Circuit Python trick. Then I am going to create a variable that's going to be a list called words. And into that, I'm casting sentence dot split. So I took that string, which happens to have spaces between the word. And then I'm using sentence dot split. That will essentially look for every white space, unless we give it a specific separator to use, and it will chop those up and put them into this list. This list called words. And then I can grab those and do something with them. So I'll show you here in action. If I let this run, you'll see it takes the first sentence. This is a neat Circuit Python trick. Then it shows me what my list looks like, which is broken up into all these separate strings. Then I'm using a little loop just to print them out to show I can do something with them. And I'm saying for word in words, print them. And then I'm putting a little timing space in there. And then since this is now a list, I can do things like ask, hey, how many things are in that? If I made this a longer sentence and resaved this, you'll see we now have a larger string to work with. We break it up into the separate pieces. And now it tells me, oh, we have 11 words in this string. And so this is how you can split a string into separate strings using split inside of Circuit Python. And that is your Circuit Python Parsec.