 So we'd have more fees for the PayPal, which sometimes if you use the PayPal integration, PayPal might show those fees in the integration. So I'm going to say this minus this are the fees. And then we're going to say that is going to come out of the PayPal clearing account, negative sum of these two, right? So now we're going to say, okay, I see this hitting my PayPal account in the bank feeds. Cool. PayPal boom. And this is how much we thought was going to hit the bank, but I knew that wasn't right because PayPal hit us with a fee of $5.55 before they deposited this amount into the bank. So now we've got more fees and you might want to charge fees for different kinds of fees, PayPal fees versus other fees and whatnot can be useful. So you can kind of track who's charging you more fees. But maybe you don't need to do that, but that might be worth doing. I'll just put it in the fees right now and then Shopify PayPal clearing. If I double click on this one and then say plus that boom, it goes back down to zero. That's what a clearing account does. We moved it from here up to the checking account and accounted for the added bit of fees that PayPal hit us with. So now we're going to say the checking accounts, the same thing in the checking account. This is the amount that was paid through the Shopify app. We're going to imagine that we see this amount come into the checking account in the bank feeds. And so now we're going to say, okay, cool. The other side is going to come out of the Shopify payments and it should be perfect with no added fees because this is the Shopify payment portal and we already saw their fees. So we've got those picked up already. So then I can go into the checking account and say bank feeds. We'll pick that up in the checking, check it out, checking, checked it. And then we go to the Shopify clearing account and boom. Plus this one, it goes back down to zero clears back out. So now you can see this is a way that we kind of get to the same end result for the most part, although I added fees for the PayPal up here. Then our last method, but we're tracking the detail as we go and that possibly could help us with the sales tax too, which is something that can muddy things up if I'm just waiting until something hits the bank. So if I unhide over here, unhide, I'm going to unhide by going from E to O, right click and unhide. So you'll recall under the cash method, I just kind of recorded everything as sales and then I made a little bit of an adjustment and just dumped everything into fees to adjust it. But over here and then and this amount, obviously if PayPal hits with a fee would be lower from the fee because I tweaked it a little bit over here. But on this side, we said we get the detail, right? So this is actually, so this amount here should be equal or greater to any 1099 that we get because the 1099 should be based on the gross sales number and we need to report something for taxes greater or equal to the 1099. Generally, otherwise we're likely to get, you know, the IRS might have questions about it, right? And but now we're more accurately breaking out the discounts versus the shipping and stuff charges and then other charges which we could break out more specifically to PayPal charges and Shopify charges and we can more easily break out our sales tax possibly helping us out with dealing with our sales tax type of situation. So you can see this could be helpful for federal income taxes, obviously it could be helpful for sales tax and it could be quite helpful for your internal decision making because again, most people are pretty good at Shopify when they're like when when they like really like these Shopify or online stores at picking products and whatnot, but possibly not sometimes they're not so good at to start off with the the deal dealing with minimizing costs like like shipping costs and fees and whatnot from different payment processors and which payment processor would be the best to use should we just have all the payment processors because that might accrues our sales or should we limit the payment processors because some of them charges way more fees than others and whatnot those kind of questions and then what kind of inventory should we be should we be purchasing is easier to kind of determine if you have a bigger a better breakout of your of your income numbers and then we'll talk about cost of goods sold which is the other half that we'll think about at a future point so it could help with of course internal decision making. So this is the manual method but it also kind of mirrors what we'll talk about later which is the which is the some of the integration app methods and what the apps do and next time we'll put this into QuickBooks maybe.