 Journal report, we might spend a little bit more time on the journal report later, but if I open this up and check it out, close in this, I'm gonna go from 010122 to 123122 and run it. Notice that this report gives you gives you all the information in a journal entry format. So quite nice report if you wanna basically see what has been done over a certain period. And you can also try to look at the debits and credits by looking at each of the forms that were entered and then trying to see what the actual journal entry is, not just from an increase and decrease perspective, but from a debit and credit perspective. You might also use this form for billing purposes to try to count the number of journal entries and try to send me a bill based on the number of journal entries. This is a great report for reviewing as a supervisor, for example, to see what other people have done. It's cause you could say what have they done in terms of data input over this timeframe? You could see the types of transactions that they're using. It's also a type of useful report to sort by transaction type because you have all these different types of transactions and you can focus in on say invoices and whatnot and see what the standard journal entries are for say an invoice. So I'm gonna go back up. Now the reason it might be an accountant report here is because it has a debit and credit column. So anything with a debit and credit column is probably put in this category by QuickBooks because QuickBooks is gonna try to make the data input as easy as possible without debits and credits.