Sure, Mike. I'll take that. It's Rob. So know, as we always say, it really is market by market or even submarket by submarket. And, I'll talk about resale a little bit here because we've always viewed resale as our biggest competitor regardless of what the new home competition is doing. And we've gotta stay tethered to that pricing with a reasonable new home premium to drive volume. So as far as the regional color, I would say in broad terms that Florida was our softest state in terms of sales demand in the first quarter. And because of that, we took the most pricing action there to find the market. And, you know, I'd say roughly two-thirds of our communities probably the same price range between $5,000 and $30,000, but we had to do more in Florida to find that market. And I'll just start with, like, Jacksonville, for example, using that as a proxy. You know, they've got just under right at seven months of supply. So it's a month or so above what is historical norm would be in terms of resale. Supply or where most people consider a balanced market. And resale is a really efficient market. One positive that see in that market is getting absorbed. So you've got days on market are actually down year over year despite that higher supply, but it's likely because pricing has moved. So we're seeing that market react. We've done the same thing in that market to find where we need to be to sell and where we can offer that new personalized energy-efficient product with a small premium resale, we find that we win. Hey. Look at the rest of Florida. Orlando was similar. They've seen their days on or their months of supply increased to about the same level, have not seen the pricing levels adjust there like they started to in Jacksonville. And there are days on market continues to be pretty elevated. So made some more significant adjustments there. The other business we have is Tampa. You know, they've got it a similar situation, but lower overall months of supply than Jackson, Orlando. So even within those three markets, it's submarket by submarket. Some perform better than others, and we've had to, you know, adjust the moves that we're making based on that. Texas, I would say, the story was a little more mixed. You know, many of our communities continue to perform very well while there were others that we had to adjust in. I'd say Houston and Austin held the best. You know, the moves there were smaller and more surgical where San Antonio required some more broad-based adjustments. But then when you get into the west, really, resale is still very very low in terms of where it's been historically. I mean, most of them are in the three or four months of supply range and haven't had to make a bidding moves in the west and southwest. It's helped better.