 So I have to put it on R1, right click and paste. And so there's our wages. So this time I'm gonna call it wages one and then let's make a wages two. Now note that when I hit enter on wages two, it automatically updated my table because I put something in right next to the table. And so Excel's saying, hey, you probably wanna add that to the table. And we do, so that's fine. So now we're gonna say, I'm just gonna do a little formula here and I'm just gonna say this equals the one to the left of it times 1.1. So we're gonna add 10% to it. So 100% plus 10% just to get a similar but different data set. And so if I hit enter, Excel guesses that we wanna do that to every line and we do. So good job, Excel, thank you. We appreciate the help and looking out for us. They're always thinking ahead to what we need, like a good staff member or something. So then if I select these two, then let's do it, let's just copy the data set. I'll just copy the entire thing. Then we can then insert. So I'm gonna go to insert and then I'm gonna go to the charts and the histogram here and we want the box and whiskers. So there's our two box and whiskers now that have been placed side by side. So that's just the, you know, that again just could give us a different kind of visualization. Let's do the same kind of formatting we did with it. So I probably don't need this one down here. I can remove that. I can say, let's go into the side part and let's say that we're gonna bring it back up to 50. So I'm gonna bring it back up to the minimum of let's say 55,000 I said this time. That's what I had in my example. And then we'll keep the top, let's make the top like 95,000, 95,000. So it zooms in a bit more. So that looks good. And so I can close that. I'll make this maybe a little wider. If I hit the dropdown, the axis titles, maybe I need, I could just say, let's get rid of this axis. And this one, I'm gonna just call it wages. Okay. And then the chart title I may not need cause I have it right there, the data labels. Those are kind of neat maybe to have, although they're kind of convoluted. But, and then the legend here, here we kind of need a legend, right? Because now we have two data sets. So now I have to say that this is data set one in the blue and data set two in the orange. Now, if you go into the options of the legends, you could put it on the right, left on the bottom and so on. But now that's what a legend is, right? That's when you need the legend. Clearly we don't need a legend if we only had one of these items in place. So it's too wide. We'll put it like right there. All right, so any case. That's, so that, if I select on the data, by the way, and we, or if we go into our data selection now, you'll note that I have now two sets of data. So on the same graph. So notice I did that by selecting the two sets of data, but I could have, if I added the data and I wanted to add it to the same graph, like if I didn't have this data set and I only had this data set, well then I could say, okay, now I've added this other column. I already made my graph instead of deleting the graph and then selecting both columns, or maybe these columns weren't next to each other or something like that. I can add another data set and I'm gonna say this is, you know, wages two that we'll have here and we'll say that this comes from this data. And by the way, there are shortcuts, like if I put my cursor up top here and then I hold down control shift and the down arrow, just to show that again, it's a little bit faster, right? So like if you get fast at this, because this data set could be quite long, so when you go like this and you gotta select the entire thing, it could be kind of tedious. If it's in a table format, you can put your cursor right at the top, so it looks like that arrow and then select it and so now it's selecting just that data. You see the dancing answer grooving right there and then if you put your cursor on the first one and you hold down control shift and then down arrow, control shift down arrow, it takes you to the bottom and highlights to the last number. If you have blank spaces in the data by the way, which is a problem, you don't really want blank spaces in the data, but if you did, then you might have to hit the down arrow, like a couple times and then when you wanna go back up, you can select control and the backspace, not delete, but the backspace and that'll take you back up to the top so that when you hit enter, you're gonna be at the top of the item here and that'll also help you to kind of see what you're looking at if you were in a formula. So we'll try to touch on that from time to time those little tricks, but there's the two side by side. So in future presentations, we're gonna be continuing on with this worksheet and we'll analyze some of the components of this box plot and then we'll compare it to like a histogram of the same data.