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Claude-3 Haiku on 2.NBT.B.5

Common Core Standard 2.NBT.B.5

This standard covers the following:

Fluently add and subtract within 100 using strategies based on place value, properties of operations, and/or the relationship between addition and subtraction.

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the morning, a sandwich shop makes 12 tuna sandwiches. Later, they make an additional 24 tuna sandwiches. How many tuna sandwiches did they make in total in the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the morning, the sandwich shop made 12 tuna sandwiches.
Later, they made an additional 24 tuna sandwiches.
To find the total number of tuna sandwiches made in the day, we add the two amounts together:
12 + 24 = <<12 + 24 = 36>>36 tuna sandwiches.

### Answer: 36

Expected answer: 36

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Later in the day, the sandwich shop sells 29 of the tuna sandwiches they made. How many tuna sandwiches are left after selling some?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The sandwich shop made a total of 36 tuna sandwiches.
They then sold 29 of those tuna sandwiches.
To find the number of tuna sandwiches left, we subtract the number sold from the total number made:
36 - 29 = <<36 - 29 = 7>>7 tuna sandwiches left.

### Answer: 7

Expected answer: 7

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the sandwich shop initially made only 4 instead of 12 tuna sandwiches in the morning, and they still made an additional 24 tuna sandwiches later in the day. How many tuna sandwiches did they make in total in the day then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the morning, the sandwich shop made 4 tuna sandwiches.
Later, they made an additional 24 tuna sandwiches.
To find the total number of tuna sandwiches made in the day, we add the two amounts together:
4 + 24 = <<4 + 24 = 28>>28 tuna sandwiches.

### Answer: 28

Expected answer: 28

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Superhero "Rocket Punch" saves 53 lives from a fire disaster. Later in the day, he also saves 42 more lives from a collapsing building. How many people did "Rocket Punch" save in total in one day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Rocket Punch saved 53 lives from the fire disaster.
Rocket Punch also saved 42 more lives from the collapsing building.
To find the total number of people Rocket Punch saved in one day, we need to add the two numbers together.
53 + 42 = 95
### Answer: 95

Expected answer: 95

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Superhero "Rocket Punch" saves 53 lives from a fire disaster. Later in the day, he also saves 42 more lives from a collapsing building. Therefore, he saved several people in total in one day. However, there were initially 97 people in danger. How many people were still in danger after "Rocket Punch" completed his rescues for the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 97 people in danger
* Rocket Punch saved 53 lives from the fire disaster
* Rocket Punch also saved 42 more lives from the collapsing building
* To find the total number of people Rocket Punch saved, we add the two numbers together:
   - 53 + 42 = 95 people saved
* To find the number of people still in danger, we take the initial 97 people and subtract the 95 people that Rocket Punch saved:
   - 97 - 95 = 2 people still in danger

### Answer: 2

Expected answer: 2

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Superhero "Rocket Punch" initially saved 53 lives from a fire disaster. However, let's consider an alternative scenario. Suppose, instead of 42, he saves 33 more lives from a collapsing building on the same day. How many people did "Rocket Punch" save in total in this scenario?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the alternative scenario, Rocket Punch saved 53 lives from the fire disaster and 33 more lives from the collapsing building.
To find the total number of people Rocket Punch saved in this scenario, we need to add the two numbers together.
53 + 33 = 86
### Answer: 86

Expected answer: 86

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Harry rides his skateboard 76 meters forward before he decides to ride it back a distance of 66 meters. How many meters is Harry from his starting point?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Harry rides his skateboard 76 meters forward.
2) Then he rides it back a distance of 66 meters.
3) To find the distance from his starting point, we need to subtract the distance he rode back from the distance he rode forward.
4) 76 meters forward - 66 meters back = 10 meters.

### Answer: 10 meters.

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if Harry initially rode his skateboard 76 meters forward, but decided to ride it back only 52 meters instead of 66? How many meters would he be from his starting point then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) Harry initially rode his skateboard 76 meters forward.
2) He then decided to ride it back 52 meters.
3) To find the distance from his starting point, we need to subtract the distance he rode back from the distance he rode forward.
4) 76 meters forward - 52 meters back = 24 meters.

### Answer: 24 meters.

Expected answer: 24

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A clothing store started the day with a stock of 87 shirts. Throughout the day, they sold 26 shirts. How many shirts are left in store at the end of the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The clothing store started the day with 87 shirts.
They sold 26 shirts throughout the day.
To find the number of shirts left in the store at the end of the day, we need to subtract the number of shirts sold from the initial stock.
87 shirts - 26 shirts sold = <<87 - 26 = 61>>61 shirts left in the store.

### Answer: 61

Expected answer: 61

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous situation, what if the clothing store initially had 87 shirts, but this time, they sold 32 shirts during the day, not 26. How many shirts would be left in the store then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The clothing store started the day with 87 shirts
* They sold 32 shirts during the day
* To find the number of shirts left in the store, we need to subtract the number of shirts sold from the initial stock
* 87 shirts - 32 shirts sold = <<87 - 32 = 55>>55 shirts left in the store

### Answer: 55

Expected answer: 55

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A professional rope maker weaved a rope spanning 18 feet long. Then they added an extra foot to it. How long was the rope after they added the extra foot?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The rope was originally 18 feet long.
The rope maker added an extra 1 foot to the rope.
Therefore, the final length of the rope is 18 feet + 1 foot = 19 feet.
### Answer: 19 feet.

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if, in the beginning, the rope maker had started with a rope that was 30 feet long instead of 18, and then added an extra foot to it as before. How long would the rope be then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* The rope maker started with a rope that was 30 feet long
* They then added an extra 1 foot to the rope
* So the final length of the rope is:
* Original length: 30 feet
* Extra foot added: 1 foot
* Total length: 30 feet + 1 foot = 31 feet

### Answer: 31 feet.

Expected answer: 31

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Jackie started with 68 meters of string for her kite. After using some for testing, she is left with 27 meters of the string. She found 5 more meters of string in her backpack. How many meters of kite string does Jackie have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Jackie started with 68 meters of string
* After using some for testing, she is left with 27 meters
* This means she used 68 - 27 = 41 meters of string for testing
* She then found 5 more meters of string in her backpack

To calculate the total amount of string Jackie has now, we add the 27 meters she had left and the 5 meters she found:
* 27 meters + 5 meters = 32 meters

### Answer: 32 meters

Expected answer: 46

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: On Tuesday, a roller skate rental shop rents out 18 pairs of roller skates. On Wednesday, the number increases and they rent out 23 pairs. How many roller skates in total were rented out over these two days?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* On Tuesday, the roller skate rental shop rented out 18 pairs of roller skates.
* On Wednesday, the number increased to 23 pairs of roller skates.
* To find the total number of roller skates rented out over the two days, we add the number of pairs rented out on each day:
* Tuesday: 18 pairs
* Wednesday: 23 pairs
* Total: 18 + 23 = 41 pairs

### Answer: 41

Expected answer: 41

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The roller skate rental shop realizes they made an error when recording their rentals on Tuesday. Instead of 18 pairs, they had actually rented out 9 pairs of roller skates that day. With the correct number for Tuesday and the 23 pairs they rented on Wednesday, how many roller skates in total were actually rented out over those two days?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's recalculate this with the corrected information:

* On Tuesday, the roller skate rental shop rented out 9 pairs of roller skates.
* On Wednesday, they rented out 23 pairs of roller skates.
* To find the total number of roller skates rented out over the two days, we add the number of pairs rented out on each day:
* Tuesday: 9 pairs
* Wednesday: 23 pairs
* Total: 9 + 23 = 32 pairs

### Answer: 32

Expected answer: 32

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: John has $59 in his wallet. After paying for lunch, he spent $25. How much money is left in his wallet?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) John had $59 in his wallet initially.
2) He spent $25 on lunch.
3) To find the amount of money left in his wallet, we subtract the amount he spent ($25) from the initial amount he had ($59).
4) $59 - $25 = $34

### Answer: $34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Instead of originally having $59, suppose John had only $40 in his wallet before he paid for lunch. How much money would he have left in his wallet after paying for lunch in this case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

1) John originally had $40 in his wallet.
2) He spent $25 on lunch.
3) To find the amount of money left in his wallet, we subtract the amount he spent ($25) from the initial amount he had ($40).
4) $40 - $25 = $15

### Answer: $15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A rainbow has 42 visible colors. However, a special rainbow appears that has an additional 6 colors that are not usually visible to the human eye. How many colors are in this special rainbow?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The rainbow normally has 42 visible colors.
The special rainbow has an additional 6 colors that are not usually visible.
To find the total number of colors in the special rainbow, we add the 42 visible colors and the 6 additional colors:
42 + 6 = 48
### Answer: 48

Expected answer: 48

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the special rainbow disappears, another forms in its place. This one has a total of 78 colors. Taking into account the number of colors in the special rainbow, how many new colors does this rainbow have that the special rainbow did not?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The special rainbow had 48 colors.
The new rainbow has a total of 78 colors.
To find the number of new colors that the new rainbow has that the special rainbow did not, we subtract the number of colors in the special rainbow from the total number of colors in the new rainbow:
78 - 48 = 30
### Answer: 30

Expected answer: 30

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A group of pirates discovered a cache of 79 diamonds. Aggravatingly, when they counted the night's end, they found that 49 of the diamonds were fake. How many real diamonds did they find?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The group of pirates discovered a cache of 79 diamonds.
Out of the 79 diamonds, 49 of them were fake.
To find the number of real diamonds, we need to subtract the number of fake diamonds from the total number of diamonds.
79 - 49 = <<79 - 49 = 30>>30 real diamonds.
### Answer: 30

Expected answer: 30

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The pirates realized that they miscalculated the count of fake diamonds. Instead of 49, there were actually 68 fake diamonds. How many real diamonds did they end up with after correcting their miscalculation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The group of pirates discovered a cache of 79 diamonds.
Initially, they thought 49 of the diamonds were fake, but they later realized that 68 of the diamonds were fake.
To find the number of real diamonds, we need to subtract the number of fake diamonds from the total number of diamonds.
79 - 68 = <<79 - 68 = 11>>11 real diamonds.
### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Anna's closet has 23 dresses that she doesn't wear anymore, out of her total collection of 62 dresses. How many dresses does she have left that she still wears?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Anna has a total of 62 dresses in her closet
* Out of those 62 dresses, 23 are dresses that she doesn't wear anymore
* To find the number of dresses she still wears, we need to subtract the number of dresses she doesn't wear (23) from the total number of dresses (62)

62 dresses - 23 dresses she doesn't wear = 39 dresses she still wears

### Answer: 39

Expected answer: 39

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, Anna had originally discarded 23 dresses from her total collection of 62 dresses. What if she decided to remove 25 dresses instead, then how many dresses would she have left to wear?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* Anna originally had a total of 62 dresses
* She decided to remove 25 dresses that she no longer wears
* To find the number of dresses she has left, we need to subtract the number of dresses she removed (25) from the total number of dresses (62)

62 dresses - 25 dresses removed = 37 dresses left

### Answer: 37

Expected answer: 37

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a high school band, they had 25 drummers to start off. After the beginning of the school year, they got additional 32 drummers to join in. How many drummers do they have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The high school band started with 25 drummers
* They then got an additional 32 drummers to join in
* To find the total number of drummers, we add the initial 25 drummers to the additional 32 drummers

25 + 32 = <<25 + 32 = 57>>57

### Answer: 57

Expected answer: 57

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the initial setup, the band started with 25 drummers. However, suppose they began with 33 drummers instead. Including the additional 25, how many drummers would they have in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

* The band initially started with 33 drummers
* They then got an additional 25 drummers to join
* To find the total number of drummers, we add the initial 33 drummers to the additional 25 drummers

33 + 25 = <<33 + 25 = 58>>58

### Answer: 58

Expected answer: 58

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a musical event, there were 49 guitars at the beginning. However, 12 guitars were sold during the first half of the event. How many guitars were left after the first half of the event?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There were 49 guitars at the beginning of the event.
* During the first half of the event, 12 guitars were sold.
* To find the number of guitars left after the first half of the event, we need to subtract the number of guitars sold from the initial number of guitars.

So, the calculation is:
* Initial number of guitars: 49
* Number of guitars sold: 12
* Number of guitars left = 49 - 12 = 37

### Answer: 37

Expected answer: 37

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: At the musical event, an additional 47 guitars were brought out to sell after the first half. How many guitars were there to sell in the second half of the event after adding the new ones?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 49 guitars
* During the first half, 12 guitars were sold
* So, the number of guitars left after the first half was 49 - 12 = 37
* After the first half, an additional 47 guitars were brought out to sell
* To find the total number of guitars to sell in the second half, we add the 47 new guitars to the 37 guitars left after the first half:
* Total guitars to sell in the second half = 37 + 47 = 84

### Answer: 84

Expected answer: 84

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a new scenario, instead of 49 guitars, the musical event initially had 34 guitars. After selling 12 guitars during the first half of the event, as before, how many guitars would be left after the first half in this case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* The initial number of guitars at the start of the event was 34.
* During the first half of the event, 12 guitars were sold.
* To find the number of guitars left after the first half, we need to subtract the number of guitars sold from the initial number of guitars.

The calculation is:
* Initial number of guitars: 34
* Number of guitars sold: 12
* Number of guitars left = 34 - 12 = 22

### Answer: 22

Expected answer: 22

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer harvests 45 kg of potato from his small plot. He has another plot from which he harvests a further 24 kg. How many kilograms of potato does the farmer harvest in total from both plots?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The farmer harvested 45 kg of potato from his small plot.
* He then harvested a further 24 kg from another plot.
* To find the total amount of potato harvested, we add the two amounts together:
* 45 kg + 24 kg = 69 kg

### Answer: 69

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the farmer has sold most of his harvest, he realizes that he still needs 78 kg of potatoes to fulfill the last order. Considering the amount he initially harvested, how many kilograms of potato does the farmer still need to harvest to meet the target set by the last order?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The farmer initially harvested a total of 69 kg of potatoes (from the previous problem).
* He still needs 78 kg of potatoes to fulfill the last order.
* To find how many more kilograms of potatoes the farmer needs to harvest, we subtract the initial harvest from the target:
* 78 kg - 69 kg = 9 kg

### Answer: 9

Expected answer: 9

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the farmer miscalculated his initial harvest and actually harvested 28 kg from his second potato plot instead of 24 kg. With the 45 kg from his first plot, how many kilograms of potatoes did the farmer harvest in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The farmer initially harvested 45 kg of potatoes from his first plot.
* He then harvested 28 kg of potatoes from his second plot, not 24 kg as previously stated.
* To find the total amount of potatoes harvested, we add the two amounts together:
* 45 kg + 28 kg = 73 kg

### Answer: 73

Expected answer: 73

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Erin started making a new blanket with 1 skein of yarn. She had to add 39 more skeins to finish the blanket. How many total skeins of yarn did she use to make the blanket?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Erin started with 1 skein of yarn and had to add 39 more skeins to finish the blanket.
The total number of skeins of yarn used to make the blanket is 1 + 39 = <<1+39=40>>40.
### Answer: 40

Expected answer: 40

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After using 1 initial skein and 39 additional skeins to finish making her blanket, Erin counted how many skeins she had left. If she had 61 skeins of yarn to begin with, how many skeins does Erin have left after making the blanket?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Erin started with 61 skeins of yarn.
She used 1 initial skein and 39 additional skeins to make the blanket, so the total number of skeins used is 1 + 39 = 40.
The number of skeins Erin has left is the initial 61 skeins minus the 40 skeins used, which is 61 - 40 = <<61-40=21>>21.
### Answer: 21

Expected answer: 21

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Erin starts again with a different project. This time she uses 8 skeins of yarn on hand and adds 39 more skeins to finish another blanket. How many total skeins of yarn does she use for this new blanket?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Erin starts with 8 skeins of yarn on hand and adds 39 more skeins to finish the new blanket.
The total number of skeins of yarn used to make the new blanket is 8 + 39 = <<8+39=47>>47.
### Answer: 47

Expected answer: 47

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A toy shop has 19 Elsa dolls from Frozen in stock. Then, they receive a new shipment that includes an additional 56 Elsa dolls. How many Elsa dolls does the toy shop now have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The toy shop initially had 19 Elsa dolls in stock.
They then received a new shipment of 56 additional Elsa dolls.
To find the total number of Elsa dolls the toy shop now has, we need to add the initial 19 dolls and the 56 new dolls.
19 + 56 = 75
### Answer: 75

Expected answer: 75

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, the toy shop decided to put 66 Elsa dolls from Frozen on a 50% discount sale and they sold out in a day. How many Elsa dolls does the toy shop now have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The toy shop initially had 75 Elsa dolls in total.
They decided to put 66 of those dolls on a 50% discount sale.
To find the number of Elsa dolls left, we need to subtract the 66 dolls that were sold on the discount sale from the initial 75 dolls.
75 - 66 = 9
### Answer: 9

Expected answer: 9

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario at the toy shop, let's imagine that initially, the toy shop only had 19 Elsa dolls from Frozen in stock but this time, they received a larger shipment, adding 73 more Elsa dolls to their inventory. How many Elsa dolls does the toy shop have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The toy shop initially had 19 Elsa dolls in stock.
They then received a new shipment of 73 additional Elsa dolls.
To find the total number of Elsa dolls the toy shop now has, we need to add the initial 19 dolls and the 73 new dolls.
19 + 73 = 92
### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A factory produces 71 candies in one hour. They produce an additional 21 candies in the next hour. How many candies did they produce in total over the two hours?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* In the first hour, the factory produced 71 candies.
* In the second hour, the factory produced an additional 21 candies.
* To find the total number of candies produced over the two hours, we add the candies from the first hour and the second hour:
* Candies produced in first hour: 71
* Candies produced in second hour: 21
* Total candies produced = 71 + 21 = 92

### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The factory produces 71 candies in one hour. They produce an additional 21 candies in the next hour. Unfortunately, 63 of those candies are deemed defective and are removed from the batch. How many candies are left after the defective ones are removed?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* In the first hour, the factory produced 71 candies.
* In the second hour, the factory produced an additional 21 candies.
* So the total number of candies produced over the two hours is:
  * Candies produced in first hour: 71
  * Candies produced in second hour: 21
  * Total candies produced = 71 + 21 = 92
* However, 63 of those candies were deemed defective and removed.
* To find the number of candies left after the defective ones were removed, we subtract 63 from the total of 92:
  * Total candies produced: 92
  * Defective candies removed: 63
  * Candies left: 92 - 63 = 29

### Answer: 29

Expected answer: 29

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The factory originally thought they produced 71 candies in the first hour. However, after a recount, they realize they only produced 47 candies in the first hour. They continue to produce an additional 21 candies in the next hour. How many candies did they produce in total over the two hours, given the revised count for the first hour?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

* Originally, the factory thought they produced 71 candies in the first hour.
* However, after a recount, they realized they only produced 47 candies in the first hour.
* In the second hour, they produced an additional 21 candies.

To find the total number of candies produced over the two hours, we need to add the candies from the first hour and the second hour:

* Candies produced in first hour: 47
* Candies produced in second hour: 21
* Total candies produced = 47 + 21 = 68

### Answer: 68

Expected answer: 68

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A group of children have 16 triangular pieces of plastic. They get another 28 rectangular ones. How many pieces do they have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The group of children have 16 triangular pieces of plastic
* They then get another 28 rectangular pieces
* To find the total number of pieces, we add the triangular and rectangular pieces together:
* 16 triangular pieces + 28 rectangular pieces = 16 + 28 = 44 pieces in total

### Answer: 44

Expected answer: 44

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a modification of the previous scenario: The children initially had 16 triangular pieces. But what if they had been given only 5 more rectangular pieces instead of 28? How many pieces would they have in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* The group of children initially had 16 triangular pieces
* They were then given 5 more rectangular pieces
* To find the total number of pieces, we add the triangular and rectangular pieces together:
* 16 triangular pieces + 5 rectangular pieces = 16 + 5 = 21 pieces in total

### Answer: 21

Expected answer: 21

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A pirate ship starts with 35 crew members. Along their adventure, they recruit 15 more sailors. How many crew members are on the pirate ship after the recruitment?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The pirate ship started with 35 crew members.
They recruited 15 more sailors.
The total number of crew members on the pirate ship after the recruitment is 35 + 15 = <<35 + 15 = 50>>50.
### Answer: 50

Expected answer: 50

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After distributing the 100 gold coins among the crew, the pirate captain realizes that they actually have more members! In fact, they didn't recruit 15 more sailors, but instead, they recruited 25 more sailors. What is the new total number of crew members on the pirate ship?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The pirate ship originally had 35 crew members.
They recruited 25 more sailors, not 15 as previously stated.
The new total number of crew members on the pirate ship is 35 + 25 = <<35 + 25 = 60>>60.
### Answer: 60

Expected answer: 60

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A pack of crayons contains 55 crayons. After using the pack for a while, 2 crayons are missing. How many crayons are left in the pack?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The pack originally contained 55 crayons.
After using the pack, 2 crayons are missing.
The number of crayons left in the pack is the original number (55) minus the number of missing crayons (2).
55 - 2 = <<55 - 2 = 53>>53 crayons are left in the pack.
### Answer: 53

Expected answer: 53

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After finding the remaining crayons in the pack, the art teacher decides to add 35 more crayons. How many crayons are there altogether in the pack now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The pack originally had 53 crayons remaining.
The art teacher then added 35 more crayons.
The total number of crayons in the pack now is the original 53 crayons plus the 35 additional crayons.
53 + 35 = <<53 + 35 = 88>>88 crayons are in the pack now.
### Answer: 88

Expected answer: 88

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original situation, let's consider if the pack of crayons had 55 crayons and 24 crayons went missing instead of 2. How many crayons would then be left in the pack?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The pack originally contained 55 crayons.
After using the pack, 24 crayons went missing.
The number of crayons left in the pack is the original number (55) minus the number of missing crayons (24).
55 - 24 = <<55 - 24 = 31>>31 crayons are left in the pack.
### Answer: 31

Expected answer: 31

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A robot factory has 84 robots in store. During the first day, they sold 68 robots. How many robots were left in the store after the first day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The robot factory had 84 robots in store initially.
During the first day, they sold 68 robots.
To find the number of robots left in the store after the first day, we need to subtract the number of robots sold from the initial number of robots.
84 robots - 68 robots sold = <<84 - 68 = 16>>16 robots left in the store.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the first day, a rival robot dispenser made an identical number of sales. How many total robots were sold by the two stores in one day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The robot factory had 84 robots in store initially
* During the first day, they sold 68 robots
* This means there were 84 - 68 = 16 robots left in the store after the first day
* The rival robot dispenser made an identical number of sales as the robot factory on the first day
* Since the robot factory sold 68 robots, the rival robot dispenser also sold 68 robots

To find the total number of robots sold by the two stores in one day, we add the number of robots sold by each store:
* Robot factory sales: 68 robots
* Rival robot dispenser sales: 68 robots
* Total robots sold = 68 + 68 = <<68 + 68 = 136>>136 robots

### Answer: 136

Expected answer: 32

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: A school janitor has 87 keys at the start of the year. However, he loses 74 of them throughout the year. How many keys does he have left at the end of the year?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The janitor started with 87 keys.
He lost 74 keys throughout the year.
To find the number of keys he has left, we subtract the number of keys lost from the initial number of keys:
87 - 74 = <<87 - 74 = 13>>13 keys.
### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the school year, the janitor receives a new set of 56 keys to replace the ones he lost. How many keys does he have now in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The janitor had 13 keys left at the end of the year.
He then received a new set of 56 keys to replace the ones he lost.
To find the total number of keys he has now, we add the number of new keys to the number of keys he had left:
13 + 56 = <<13 + 56 = 69>>69 keys.
### Answer: 69

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario, suppose that the janitor had actually lost 34 keys throughout the year instead of 74. How many keys would he have had left at the end of the year in that case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The janitor started with 87 keys.
He lost 34 keys throughout the year.
To find the number of keys he has left, we subtract the number of keys lost from the initial number of keys:
87 - 34 = <<87 - 34 = 53>>53 keys.
### Answer: 53

Expected answer: 53

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Sarah initially had 51 pillows in her store. After selling some of them, she's left with 2 pillows. How many pillows did Sarah sell?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Sarah initially had 51 pillows in her store
* After selling some of them, she's left with 2 pillows
* To find the number of pillows she sold, we need to subtract the number of pillows she has left (2) from the initial number of pillows (51)

Calculation:
* Initial number of pillows: 51
* Number of pillows left: 2
* Number of pillows sold: 51 - 2 = 49

### Answer: 49

Expected answer: 49

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After rechecking her inventory, Sarah discovered that she actually started with 64 pillows instead of 51. Keeping the sales and discovery of additional pillows in mind, how many pillows did Sarah end up selling?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's rework this with the new information:
* Sarah initially had 64 pillows in her store
* After selling some of them, she's left with 2 pillows
* To find the number of pillows she sold, we need to subtract the number of pillows she has left (2) from the initial number of pillows (64)

Calculation:
* Initial number of pillows: 64
* Number of pillows left: 2
* Number of pillows sold: 64 - 2 = 62

### Answer: 62

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: John picked 27 carrots from his garden, but 16 of them are not ripe yet and can't be used. After this, John's friend gives him 1 more ripe carrot. How many ripe carrots does John have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) John picked 27 carrots from his garden.
2) 16 of them are not ripe yet and can't be used.
3) So the number of ripe carrots he has initially is 27 - 16 = 11.
4) John's friend then gives him 1 more ripe carrot.
5) So the total number of ripe carrots John has now is 11 + 1 = 12.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: John initially thought he had picked 32 carrots from his garden, but he realized his mistake and corrected the number to the previously stated 27. If we consider the scenario where he indeed had 32 to begin with and 16 of them were not ripe, and then his friend gives him another ripe carrot, how many ripe carrots would he have then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

1) John initially thought he had picked 32 carrots from his garden.
2) But he later corrected the number to 27 carrots.
3) Let's consider the scenario where he did have 32 carrots to begin with.
4) Out of the 32 carrots, 16 of them were not ripe.
5) So the number of ripe carrots he had initially was 32 - 16 = 16.
6) Then, his friend gave him 1 more ripe carrot.
7) So the total number of ripe carrots John has now is 16 + 1 = 17.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Steve has a collection of unique lamps. He initially had 10 lamps but just bought 9 more from an antique shop. Shortly after, he found a store closing sale and added another 27 lamps to his collection. How many lamps does he have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Steve initially had 10 lamps.
2) He then bought 9 more lamps from an antique shop.
   * So now he has 10 + 9 = 19 lamps.
3) He then found a store closing sale and added another 27 lamps to his collection.
   * So now he has 19 + 27 = 46 lamps in total.

### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Steve's friend, noting Steve's growing lamp collection, decided to gift him 20 more unique lamps. After the new addition, how many lamps does Steve have in his collection now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Originally, Steve had 46 lamps in his collection.
2) His friend then gifted him 20 more unique lamps.
   * So now he has 46 + 20 = 66 lamps in his collection.

### Answer: 66

Expected answer: 66

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Seeing Steve's enjoyment over his growing lamp collection, what if instead of buying 9 lamps from the antique shop, he actually bought 30 lamps? Including the 10 lamps he initially had and the 27 lamps from the store closing sale, how many lamps does Steve then have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:

1) Steve initially had 10 lamps.
2) He then bought 30 more lamps from the antique shop.
   * So now he has 10 + 30 = 40 lamps.
3) He then found a store closing sale and added another 27 lamps to his collection.
   * So now he has 40 + 27 = 67 lamps in total.

### Answer: 67

Expected answer: 67

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A helicopter company owns 23 helicopters. They just added 12 more to their fleet. How many helicopters does the company own now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The company originally owned 23 helicopters.
They added 12 more helicopters to their fleet.
To find the total number of helicopters the company owns now, we add the original number of helicopters to the number of new helicopters added:
23 + 12 = <<23 + 12 = 35>>35 helicopters.
### Answer: 35

Expected answer: 35

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Originally, the helicopter company owned 71 helicopters instead of 23. They still added 12 more to their fleet. How many helicopters does the company own now with this new initial amount?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The company originally owned 71 helicopters.
They added 12 more helicopters to their fleet.
To find the total number of helicopters the company owns now, we add the original number of helicopters to the number of new helicopters added:
71 + 12 = <<71 + 12 = 83>>83 helicopters.
### Answer: 83

Expected answer: 83

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer collected 9 oranges from one tree and 38 more from another tree. How many oranges did the farmer collect in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The farmer collected 9 oranges from one tree and 38 more from another tree.
To find the total number of oranges collected, we add the number of oranges from the two trees:
9 + 38 = <<9 + 38 = 47>>47 oranges.
### Answer: 47

Expected answer: 47

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the farmer collected 9 oranges from one tree and 38 more from another tree, he realized he needs 81 oranges in total for the local market. How many more oranges does he need to meet his target?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The farmer collected 9 oranges from one tree and 38 more from another tree, for a total of 9 + 38 = 47 oranges.
The farmer needs 81 oranges in total for the local market.
To find the number of additional oranges the farmer needs, we subtract the total oranges collected from the target:
81 - 47 = <<81 - 47 = 34>>34 oranges.
### Answer: 34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the farmer collected 9 oranges from one tree and 38 from another, let's say he collected 55 instead of 38 from the second tree. Thus, how many oranges did the farmer end up collecting in this scenario?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* The farmer collected 9 oranges from the first tree
* He then collected 55 oranges from the second tree
* To find the total number of oranges collected, we add the amounts from the two trees:
* 9 + 55 = <<9 + 55 = 64>>64 oranges
### Answer: 64

Expected answer: 64

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There are 82 bubbles being blown in a kiddie park. Suddenly, 20 bubbles pop. How many bubbles remain un-popped?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There were originally 82 bubbles being blown in the kiddie park.
* Then, 20 bubbles popped.
* To find the number of bubbles that remain un-popped, we need to subtract the number of popped bubbles from the original number of bubbles.
* 82 bubbles - 20 popped bubbles = 62 bubbles remain un-popped.

### Answer: 62

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: There are 82 bubbles being blown in a kiddie park. Suddenly, 20 bubbles pop. Later, a child happens to blow an additional 19 bubbles. How many bubbles are there now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1. Originally, there were 82 bubbles being blown in the kiddie park.
2. Then, 20 bubbles popped.
   * So, the number of bubbles remaining after the 20 bubbles popped is 82 - 20 = 62 bubbles.
3. Later, a child blew an additional 19 bubbles.
   * So, the total number of bubbles now is the 62 bubbles that remained after the 20 bubbles popped, plus the 19 additional bubbles blown.
   * 62 + 19 = 81 bubbles.

### Answer: 81

Expected answer: 81

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In our previous scenario at the kiddie park, consider if we had initially 82 bubbles but this time, 53 bubbles popped. How many bubbles would there be left un-popped in this situation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* There were originally 82 bubbles being blown in the kiddie park.
* Then, 53 bubbles popped.
* To find the number of bubbles that remain un-popped, we need to subtract the number of popped bubbles from the original number of bubbles.
* 82 bubbles - 53 popped bubbles = 29 bubbles remain un-popped.

### Answer: 29

Expected answer: 29

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: On Tuesday, a group of researchers spotted 42 sharks near an island. On Wednesday, they spotted an additional 26 sharks around the same place. On Thursday, they spotted 32 more in the nearby waters, using a different technology. How many sharks were spotted in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* On Tuesday, the researchers spotted 42 sharks
* On Wednesday, they spotted an additional 26 sharks
* On Thursday, they spotted 32 more sharks

To find the total number of sharks spotted, we need to add up the number of sharks spotted each day:
* Tuesday: 42 sharks
* Wednesday: 26 additional sharks
* Thursday: 32 additional sharks

So the total number of sharks spotted is:
42 + 26 + 32 = 100 sharks

### Answer: 100

Expected answer: 100

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: On Tuesday, a group of researchers spotted 42 sharks near an island. On Wednesday, they spotted an additional 26 sharks around the same place. On Thursday, they spotted 32 more in the nearby waters, using a different technology. Sometime later, the same group of researchers reports that 59 of their earlier recorded numbers of sharks have migrated elsewhere. After considering this, how many sharks are now left in the area according to their accounting?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:

* On Tuesday, the researchers spotted 42 sharks
* On Wednesday, they spotted an additional 26 sharks
* On Thursday, they spotted 32 more sharks
* So the total number of sharks spotted initially was:
  * 42 + 26 + 32 = 100 sharks

* The researchers later reported that 59 of the earlier recorded sharks have migrated elsewhere.
* To find the number of sharks left in the area, we need to subtract the 59 sharks that migrated from the total of 100 sharks.
* 100 sharks - 59 sharks = 41 sharks

### Answer: 41

Expected answer: 41

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Previously, on Tuesday and Wednesday, a group of researchers spotted a total of 68 sharks near an island, and on Thursday, they spotted 32 more in the nearby waters. But now suppose that on Thursday, instead of spotting 32 more sharks, they had only spotted 15 more. How many sharks would they have reported then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* On Tuesday and Wednesday, the researchers spotted a total of 68 sharks
* On Thursday, they spotted 15 more sharks

To find the total number of sharks spotted, we need to add the number of sharks spotted on Tuesday and Wednesday to the number of sharks spotted on Thursday:
* Tuesday and Wednesday: 68 sharks
* Thursday: 15 additional sharks

So the total number of sharks spotted would be:
68 + 15 = 83 sharks

### Answer: 83

Expected answer: 83

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At a picnic, there were 61 turkey sandwiches at the start. After some time, 2 of these turkey sandwiches were eaten. How many sandwiches were left over at the picnic?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
At the start of the picnic, there were 61 turkey sandwiches.
After some time, 2 of these turkey sandwiches were eaten.
To find the number of sandwiches left over, we subtract the number of sandwiches eaten from the initial number of sandwiches.
61 - 2 = <<61 - 2 = 59>>59 sandwiches were left over at the picnic.

### Answer: 59

Expected answer: 59

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the initial 2 turkey sandwiches were eaten at the picnic, another 31 sandwiches were eaten during a late lunch. How many sandwiches were left over after the late lunch?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
At the start of the picnic, there were 61 turkey sandwiches.
After some time, 2 of these turkey sandwiches were eaten.
So, there were 61 - 2 = 59 sandwiches left.
During the late lunch, another 31 sandwiches were eaten.
To find the number of sandwiches left over after the late lunch, we subtract the number of sandwiches eaten during the late lunch from the number of sandwiches left after the initial 2 were eaten.
59 - 31 = <<59 - 31 = 28>>28 sandwiches were left over after the late lunch.

### Answer: 28

Expected answer: 28

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the same picnic scenario, what if there were originally 54 turkey sandwiches instead of 61? After 2 sandwiches were eaten, how many sandwiches would now be left over?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 54 turkey sandwiches at the picnic.
* After some time, 2 of these turkey sandwiches were eaten.
* To find the number of sandwiches left over, we subtract the number of sandwiches eaten from the initial number of sandwiches.
* 54 - 2 = <<54 - 2 = 52>>52 sandwiches were left over at the picnic.

### Answer: 52

Expected answer: 52

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Brand M produces 97 bags of marshmallows. During a surprise sale, Brand M manages to sell 31 bags. How many bags of marshmallows does Brand M have left to sell after the surprise sale?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Brand M produced 97 bags of marshmallows.
During the surprise sale, Brand M sold 31 bags.
To find the number of bags left to sell, we need to subtract the number of bags sold from the total number of bags produced.

97 bags - 31 bags sold = <<97 - 31 = 66>>66 bags left to sell.

### Answer: 66

Expected answer: 66

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous problem, Brand M originally produced 97 bags of marshmallows. Let's consider a scenario where Brand M initially produced only 62 bags of marshmallows instead of 97. Now, if they sell 31 bags during the surprise sale, how many bags of marshmallows would Brand M have left to sell?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

Reasoning:
* Brand M originally produced 62 bags of marshmallows
* During the surprise sale, they sold 31 bags
* To find the number of bags left to sell, we need to subtract the number of bags sold from the total number of bags produced

62 bags - 31 bags sold = <<62 - 31 = 31>>31 bags left to sell

### Answer: 31

Expected answer: 31

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There are 20 kids playing on the jungle gym in the morning. In the afternoon, an additional 25 kids join in for play. How many kids in total played on the jungle gym that day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* In the morning, there were 20 kids playing on the jungle gym.
* In the afternoon, an additional 25 kids joined in for play.
* To find the total number of kids that played on the jungle gym that day, we need to add the morning and afternoon numbers together.

So, the total number of kids that played on the jungle gym that day is:
20 (morning) + 25 (afternoon) = <<20 + 25 = 45>>45

### Answer: 45

Expected answer: 45

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's say on a different day, instead of 20 kids in the morning, there were 59 kids playing on the jungle gym. If the same amount of 25 more kids joined in the afternoon as the previous day, how many kids in total played on the jungle gym that day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* In the morning, there were 59 kids playing on the jungle gym.
* In the afternoon, an additional 25 kids joined in for play.
* To find the total number of kids that played on the jungle gym that day, we need to add the morning and afternoon numbers together.

So, the total number of kids that played on the jungle gym that day is:
59 (morning) + 25 (afternoon) = <<59 + 25 = 84>>84

### Answer: 84

Expected answer: 84

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A jeweler crafts 61 rings on Monday. The next day, they make an additional 21 rings. How many rings did the jeweler make in total over the two days?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* On Monday, the jeweler crafted 61 rings.
* On Tuesday, the jeweler made an additional 21 rings.
* To find the total number of rings made over the two days, we add the number of rings made on Monday and Tuesday:
* 61 rings (Monday) + 21 rings (Tuesday) = 82 rings

### Answer: 82

Expected answer: 82

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose on the first day the jeweler only managed to craft 13 rings instead of 61. He still made an additional 21 rings the following day. How many rings did the jeweler make in total over the two days given this new information?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* On the first day, the jeweler crafted 13 rings.
* On the second day, the jeweler made an additional 21 rings.
* To find the total number of rings made over the two days, we add the number of rings made on the first day and the second day:
* 13 rings (first day) + 21 rings (second day) = 34 rings

### Answer: 34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Tommy the cat catches 26 mice in the morning. After having a nap, he then catches an additional 17 mice in the afternoon. How many mice does Tommy catch in total during the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* In the morning, Tommy caught 26 mice.
* In the afternoon, after his nap, he caught an additional 17 mice.
* To find the total number of mice caught during the day, we add the morning and afternoon catches:
* 26 mice (morning) + 17 mice (afternoon) = 43 mice.

### Answer: 43

Expected answer: 43

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of catching 26 mice in the morning, Tommy the cat catches 15 mice. He then catches an additional 17 mice in the afternoon. How many mice does Tommy catch in total during the day now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the morning, Tommy caught 15 mice.
* In the afternoon, after his nap, he caught an additional 17 mice.
* To find the total number of mice caught during the day, we add the morning and afternoon catches:
* 15 mice (morning) + 17 mice (afternoon) = 32 mice.

### Answer: 32

Expected answer: 32

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Baxter has 67 logs in his snowy cottage for the fireplace. After burning 61 logs over a week, Baxter brought in 74 more logs from the outside storage. How many logs does Baxter have available now for the fireplace?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Baxter initially had 67 logs in his cottage.
2) He burned 61 logs over a week.
3) After burning the 61 logs, he had 67 - 61 = 6 logs remaining.
4) Baxter then brought in 74 more logs from the outside storage.
5) So the total number of logs Baxter has available now is 6 + 74 = 80 logs.

### Answer: 80

Expected answer: 80

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A local police station has 94 officers. Afterwards, an additional 5 officers were recruited to join the team. How many officers are there now in total at the local police station?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The local police station initially had 94 officers.
An additional 5 officers were recruited to join the team.
Therefore, the total number of officers at the local police station now is 94 + 5 = 99.
### Answer: 99

Expected answer: 99

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the 5 new officers were recruited to the local police station, how many additional officers were added to the original force of 94 officers?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The original force of officers at the local police station was 94.
After the additional 5 officers were recruited, the total number of officers is 99.
To find the number of additional officers added to the original force, we subtract the original 94 officers from the new total of 99 officers.
99 - 94 = 5
Therefore, 5 additional officers were added to the original force of 94 officers.
### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Instead, if the local police station originally had 87 officers, how many officers would there be in total after the recruitment of an additional 5 officers?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) The local police station originally had 87 officers.
2) An additional 5 officers were recruited to join the team.
3) To find the total number of officers after the recruitment, we add the original number of officers and the additional officers:
   87 + 5 = 92
### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Rob has 11 guitar picks but he loses 2 of them. The next day he goes to the store and buys 75 more. How many guitar picks does Rob have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Rob initially had 11 guitar picks.
2. He then lost 2 of them, so he had 11 - 2 = 9 guitar picks.
3. The next day, he went to the store and bought 75 more guitar picks.
4. So now he has 9 + 75 = 84 guitar picks.

### Answer: 84

Expected answer: 84

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: On a sunny afternoon, Timmy goes to the park and has 74 goes on the big slide. After getting tired, he stops and takes a break, only to return and have another 51 goes. How many time less did he go on the slide after his break compared to before?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Timmy had 74 goes on the big slide before his break.
2) After his break, he had another 51 goes on the slide.
3) To find how many times less he went on the slide after his break, we need to compare the two numbers:
   * Before break: 74 goes
   * After break: 51 goes
4) To find how many times less, we divide the larger number by the smaller number:
   * 74 / 51 = 1.45
5) This means Timmy went 1.45 times less on the slide after his break compared to before.

### Answer: 1.45

Expected answer: 23

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a large beehive, there are 73 worker bees. However, 33 of them leave the hive to collect pollen. How many worker bees are left in the hive after those 33 have gone out to gather pollen?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There are 73 worker bees in the large beehive
* 33 of those worker bees leave the hive to collect pollen
* To find the number of worker bees left in the hive, we need to subtract the number that left (33) from the total number of worker bees (73)

73 worker bees - 33 worker bees that left = 40 worker bees left in the hive

### Answer: 40

Expected answer: 40

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the same beehive, think about a different day when there were initially 73 worker bees. However, on that day, 57 of them left to collect pollen instead of 33. How many worker bees would have been left in the hive after those 57 bees went out to gather pollen?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* There are initially 73 worker bees in the beehive
* 57 of those worker bees leave the hive to collect pollen
* To find the number of worker bees left in the hive, we need to subtract the number that left (57) from the total number of worker bees (73)

73 worker bees - 57 worker bees that left = 16 worker bees left in the hive

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A helicopter manufacturing company produced 86 helicopters this year. They had to recall 34 of them due to a defect. How many helicopters are left in their inventory?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The company produced 86 helicopters this year.
They had to recall 34 of them due to a defect.
To find the number of helicopters left in their inventory, we subtract the number of recalled helicopters from the total number of helicopters produced:
86 - 34 = <<86 - 34 = 52>>52 helicopters are left in their inventory.
### Answer: 52

Expected answer: 52

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A technology shop has 89 desktop computers in stock. They receive a new shipment that adds an additional 5 computers to their inventory. How many computers do they have in stock now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The technology shop originally had 89 desktop computers in stock.
They received a new shipment that added 5 more computers to their inventory.
To find the total number of computers they have in stock now, we add the original 89 computers to the 5 new computers:
89 + 5 = <<89 + 5 = 94>>94 computers.
### Answer: 94

Expected answer: 94

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After adding the 5 new computers to their inventory, the technology shop realizes they had miscounted and there were actually 2 additional computers in the back storage room. How many computers do they have in stock in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Originally, the technology shop had 89 desktop computers in stock.
They then received a new shipment that added 5 more computers to their inventory.
So after the new shipment, they had 89 + 5 = 94 computers in stock.
However, they then realized they had miscounted and there were actually 2 additional computers in the back storage room.
To find the total number of computers they have in stock now, we add the 2 additional computers to the 94 computers they had after the new shipment:
94 + 2 = <<94 + 2 = 96>>96 computers.
### Answer: 96

Expected answer: 96

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The technology shop had initially thought they had 89 desktop computers, but a recount revealed that they actually had only 61 desktop computers before the new shipment came in. If they still received a new shipment that added 5 computers to their inventory, how many computers do they have in stock now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The technology shop originally had 61 desktop computers in stock, not 89 as they had initially thought.
They received a new shipment that added 5 more computers to their inventory.
To find the total number of computers they have in stock now, we add the original 61 computers to the 5 new computers:
61 + 5 = <<61 + 5 = 66>>66 computers.
### Answer: 66

Expected answer: 66

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A treasure map states that the starting point is 74 miles from the treasure. Peter has travelled 70 miles so far. How many more miles does Peter have to travel to reach the treasure?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The starting point is 74 miles from the treasure
* Peter has travelled 70 miles so far
* To find how many more miles Peter has to travel, we need to subtract the distance he has already travelled from the total distance to the treasure

So, the calculation is:
* Total distance to treasure: 74 miles
* Distance Peter has travelled: 70 miles
* Distance remaining: 74 miles - 70 miles = 4 miles

### Answer: 4

Expected answer: 4

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reaching the treasure and returning to his starting point, Peter decides to go on another treasure hunt. This time, the map states that the treasure is 74 miles away from the starting point, but he has already covered 45 miles. How many more miles does Peter have to travel to reach the second treasure?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The starting point for the second treasure hunt is 74 miles away from the treasure
* Peter has already covered 45 miles
* To find how many more miles Peter has to travel, we need to subtract the distance he has already travelled from the total distance to the treasure

So, the calculation is:
* Total distance to treasure: 74 miles
* Distance Peter has already travelled: 45 miles
* Distance remaining: 74 miles - 45 miles = 29 miles

### Answer: 29

Expected answer: 29

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A house painter uses 12 gallons of blue paint for the exterior wall of a house. The painter then mixes an additional 75 gallons of white paint to get the desired shade. How many gallons of paint in total did the painter use?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The painter used 12 gallons of blue paint for the exterior wall.
The painter then mixed an additional 75 gallons of white paint to get the desired shade.
To find the total gallons of paint used, we add the blue paint and the white paint:
12 gallons of blue paint + 75 gallons of white paint = <<12 + 75 = 87>>87 gallons of paint in total.

### Answer: 87

Expected answer: 87

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After painting the exterior wall of the house, the painter realized that they used too much paint. They ended up returning 85 gallons back to the store. How many gallons of paint did the painter end up using after returning the excess?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The painter originally used 12 gallons of blue paint and 75 gallons of white paint, for a total of 87 gallons.
2) The painter then returned 85 gallons back to the store.
3) To find the total gallons of paint the painter ended up using, we take the original 87 gallons and subtract the 85 gallons that were returned:
87 gallons - 85 gallons = <<87 - 85 = 2>>2 gallons of paint.

### Answer: 2

Expected answer: 2

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Initially, the painter calculated that they used 12 gallons of blue paint and 75 gallons of white paint. But on double-checking their measurements, they realized they had actually used only 57 gallons of white paint instead of 75 gallons. So, how many gallons of paint did the painter actually use for the house?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:

1. The painter initially calculated that they used:
   - 12 gallons of blue paint
   - 75 gallons of white paint
   - Total: 12 + 75 = 87 gallons of paint

2. However, the painter later realized they had actually used only 57 gallons of white paint, not 75 gallons.

3. To find the actual total gallons of paint used, we need to update the calculation:
   - 12 gallons of blue paint
   - 57 gallons of white paint
   - Total: 12 + 57 = <<12 + 57 = 69>>69 gallons of paint

### Answer: 69

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: John had 53 dollars in his wallet. After buying a book, he found that he was left with 39 dollars less in his wallet than what he had initially. How much money does he have left in his wallet after buying the book?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* John had $53 in his wallet initially
* After buying a book, he had $39 less than what he had initially
* To find the amount of money he has left in his wallet, we need to subtract $39 from the initial $53

Calculation:
* Initial amount: $53
* Amount left after buying the book: $53 - $39 = $14

### Answer: $14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A water tank contains 38 gallons of water. Additional 21 gallons of water are poured into the tank. If the total capacity of the tank is 83 gallons, how much more water can it hold before it is full?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The water tank initially contains 38 gallons of water.
2) An additional 21 gallons of water are poured into the tank.
3) The total capacity of the tank is 83 gallons.
4) To find how much more water the tank can hold before it is full, we need to subtract the total amount of water in the tank from the total capacity of the tank.
5) The total amount of water in the tank is 38 + 21 = 59 gallons.
6) The total capacity of the tank is 83 gallons.
7) 83 gallons - 59 gallons = 24 gallons.

### Answer: 24 gallons

Expected answer: 24

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following up from the first problem, instead of a total tank capacity of 83 gallons, suppose the tank can only hold up to 80 gallons of water. After adding the 38 gallons of initial water and another 21 gallons, how much more water can this tank hold before it becomes full?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
1) The tank initially contained 38 gallons of water.
2) An additional 21 gallons of water were added.
3) So the total amount of water in the tank is now 38 + 21 = 59 gallons.
4) The total capacity of the tank is 80 gallons.
5) To find how much more water the tank can hold before it is full, we subtract the current amount of water from the total capacity:
6) 80 gallons - 59 gallons = 21 gallons.

### Answer: 21 gallons

Expected answer: 21

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: An underwater exploration found 52 starfish in one area of the ocean. They explored another area and found 42 more starfish. How many starfish were found in total during the exploration?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The first area had 52 starfish.
The second area had 42 more starfish than the first area.
The total number of starfish found is the sum of the starfish in the first area and the second area.
52 + 42 = <<52 + 42 = 94>>94 starfish were found in total during the exploration.
### Answer: 94

Expected answer: 94

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the underwater exploration, a sudden tempest washes ashore 95 starfish. After saving all the starfish they found in the ocean, how many more starfish do they need to rescue from the shore to have saved an equal number from both places?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The total number of starfish found in the ocean exploration was 94.
The number of starfish washed ashore is 95.
To have an equal number of starfish saved from both places, the difference between the number of starfish found in the ocean and the number washed ashore needs to be 0.
The number of additional starfish that need to be rescued from the shore is 95 - 94 = <<95 - 94 = 1>>1.
### Answer: 1

Expected answer: 1

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reconsidering the underwater exploration data, the team realized they initially miscalculated. Instead of finding 52 starfish in the first area, they had actually found 25. How many starfish were found in total now during the exploration, given the change in the count of the first area?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's rework this with the updated information.

Reasoning:
The first area had 25 starfish, not 52 as initially reported.
The second area had 42 more starfish than the first area.
So the number of starfish in the second area was 25 + 42 = 67.
The total number of starfish found is the sum of the starfish in the first area and the second area.
25 + 67 = <<25 + 67 = 92>>92 starfish were found in total during the exploration.

### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 67

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: A Transport company has 65 trucks. After some trucks broke down, they found that they had 31 trucks left. How many trucks broke down?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
* The transport company originally had 65 trucks.
* After some trucks broke down, they had 31 trucks left.
* To find the number of trucks that broke down, we need to subtract the number of trucks left from the original number of trucks.
* 65 trucks - 31 trucks = 34 trucks

### Answer: 34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Considering the previous situation, suppose that instead of 31 trucks breaking down, only 55 trucks were functional from the initial fleet of 65 trucks. In this case, how many trucks would have broken down?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* The transport company originally had 65 trucks
* After some trucks broke down, they had 55 trucks left
* To find the number of trucks that broke down, we need to subtract the number of trucks left from the original number of trucks
* 65 trucks - 55 trucks = 10 trucks

### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A music store originally has 96 pianos on display. Over the course of the month, they sell 39 of those pianos. How many pianos are left in the store now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The music store originally had 96 pianos on display.
They sold 39 of those pianos.
To find the number of pianos left in the store, we need to subtract the number of pianos sold from the original number of pianos.
96 - 39 = 57 pianos left in the store.

### Answer: 57

Expected answer: 57

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario, the music store actually started with 96 pianos and sold 43 instead of 39. If this were the case, how many pianos would be left in the store after these sales?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this revised problem.

Reasoning:
The music store originally had 96 pianos on display.
They sold 43 of those pianos.
To find the number of pianos left in the store, we need to subtract the number of pianos sold from the original number of pianos.
96 - 43 = 53 pianos left in the store.

### Answer: 53

Expected answer: 53

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Wise Wizard Wally has 82 spells in his grimoire. He decides to exclude 26 of them as they are too easy. How many spells are left in his grimoire after he excludes the easy ones?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Wise Wizard Wally has 82 spells in his grimoire.
He decides to exclude 26 of them as they are too easy.
The number of spells left in his grimoire after he excludes the easy ones is 82 - 26 = <<82-26=56>>56.
### Answer: 56

Expected answer: 56

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Wise Wizard Wally learns an additional 34 new complex spells to add to his grimoire. How many spells does he now have in his grimoire after adding the new spells to those left from before?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Wise Wizard Wally had 56 spells left in his grimoire after excluding the 26 easy ones.
He then learns an additional 34 new complex spells to add to his grimoire.
The total number of spells he now has in his grimoire is 56 + 34 = <<56+34=90>>90.
### Answer: 90

Expected answer: 90

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Wise Wizard Wally reconsiders and decides to exclude only 64 spells instead of the original 82 from his grimoire, as he feels some spells might still be helpful. How many spells does Wally have left in his grimoire after excluding the 64 spells?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Wise Wizard Wally originally had 82 spells in his grimoire.
He decides to exclude 64 spells instead of the original 82.
The number of spells left in his grimoire after excluding 64 spells is 82 - 64 = <<82-64=18>>18.
### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Sam has 28 friends from school and makes 27 new friends at a summer camp. How many friends does Sam have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Sam has 28 friends from school
* Sam makes 27 new friends at summer camp
* To find the total number of friends Sam has, we add the number of friends from school and the new friends from summer camp:
* 28 friends from school + 27 new friends from summer camp = 55 friends in total

### Answer: 55

Expected answer: 55

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Sam has 28 friends from school and makes 27 new friends at a summer camp. Later, Sam meets 22 more friends on a trip to an amusement park. How many friends does Sam have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Sam has 28 friends from school
* Sam makes 27 new friends at summer camp
* So the total number of friends Sam has so far is 28 + 27 = 55 friends
* Sam then meets 22 more friends on a trip to an amusement park
* To find the total number of friends Sam has now, we add the 22 new friends to the 55 friends he had before:
* 55 friends + 22 new friends = 77 friends in total

### Answer: 77

Expected answer: 77

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In our previous scenario, Sam had 28 friends from school and made 27 new friends at a summer camp, then met 22 more friends on a trip. Now, let's consider a situation where Sam initially had 44 friends from school instead of 28, and still made 27 new friends at a summer camp. How many friends does Sam have in total now, not counting the 22 friends from the amusement park?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Originally, Sam had 44 friends from school
* Sam made 27 new friends at summer camp
* So the total number of friends Sam had after the summer camp is:
* 44 friends from school + 27 new friends from summer camp = 71 friends

### Answer: 71

Expected answer: 71

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the Carpenter's Workshop, 21 tables were built on Monday. On Tuesday, they built an additional 74 tables. How many tables did they build in total over the two days?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* On Monday, 21 tables were built
* On Tuesday, an additional 74 tables were built
* To find the total number of tables built over the two days, we add the number of tables built on Monday and Tuesday:
* 21 tables (Monday) + 74 tables (Tuesday) = 95 tables

### Answer: 95

Expected answer: 95

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the Carpenter's Workshop built 21 tables on Monday and an additional 74 tables on Tuesday, they were asked to send 42 of the tables they built to a nearby store. How many tables did they have left after sending those away?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* On Monday, they built 21 tables
* On Tuesday, they built an additional 74 tables
* So the total number of tables they built over the two days is:
  * 21 (Monday) + 74 (Tuesday) = 95 tables
* They were then asked to send 42 of the tables to a nearby store
* To find how many tables they had left, we subtract the 42 tables they sent away from the total 95 tables they built:
  * 95 tables - 42 tables = 53 tables

### Answer: 53

Expected answer: 53

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Remember that the Carpenter's Workshop built 21 tables on Monday and an additional 74 on Tuesday. But what if they only managed to build an additional 32 tables on Tuesday instead of 74? How many tables would they have built in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's re-work this with the new information:
* On Monday, 21 tables were built
* On Tuesday, an additional 32 tables were built (instead of 74)
* To find the total number of tables built over the two days, we add the number of tables built on Monday and Tuesday:
* 21 tables (Monday) + 32 tables (Tuesday) = 53 tables

### Answer: 53

Expected answer: 53

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Danny got a new sleeping bag for his camping trip. The temperature inside the tent was 13 degrees Celsius. He added a heater which increased the temperature by 45 degrees Celsius. What was the final temperature inside the tent after using the heater?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The initial temperature inside the tent was 13 degrees Celsius.
The heater increased the temperature by 45 degrees Celsius.
To find the final temperature, we add the increase in temperature to the initial temperature:
13 degrees Celsius + 45 degrees Celsius = 58 degrees Celsius.

### Answer: 58 degrees Celsius.

Expected answer: 58

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Danny got a new sleeping bag for his camping trip. The temperature inside the tent was 13 degrees Celsius. He added a heater which increased the temperature by 45 degrees Celsius. Later on, he added another heating device which increased the temperature by an additional 4 degrees Celsius. What was the final temperature inside the tent after using both heating devices?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. The initial temperature inside the tent was 13 degrees Celsius.
2. The first heater increased the temperature by 45 degrees Celsius.
   * So the temperature after the first heater was 13 + 45 = 58 degrees Celsius.
3. The second heating device increased the temperature by an additional 4 degrees Celsius.
   * So the final temperature after both heating devices was 58 + 4 = 62 degrees Celsius.

### Answer: 62 degrees Celsius.

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, Danny added a heater to his tent when the initial temperature was 13 degrees Celsius. But let's consider a different situation. Suppose the tent's initial temperature was higher and reached 81 degrees Celsius. If Danny added a heater to the tent that was already 13 degrees Celsius, what would be the final temperature inside the tent?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* The initial temperature inside the tent was 81 degrees Celsius.
* Danny added a heater that increased the temperature by 45 degrees Celsius.
* To find the final temperature, we add the increase in temperature to the initial temperature:
* 81 degrees Celsius + 45 degrees Celsius = 126 degrees Celsius.

### Answer: 126 degrees Celsius.

Expected answer: 94

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: A library had 73 books in the fiction section. However, the total number of books should be 91. How many more books does the library need to add to the fiction section?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The library currently has 73 books in the fiction section.
2) The total number of books the library should have is 91.
3) To find how many more books the library needs to add to the fiction section, we need to subtract the current number of books in the fiction section from the total number of books the library should have.
4) 91 - 73 = 18
Therefore, the library needs to add 18 more books to the fiction section.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The inventory error was realized and initially the library had 71 books in the fiction section instead of 73. Now, how many more books does the library need to add to the fiction section to reach the targeted total number of 91 books?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's re-work this step-by-step:
1) The library initially had 71 books in the fiction section, not 73.
2) The total number of books the library should have is 91.
3) To find how many more books the library needs to add to the fiction section, we need to subtract the current number of books in the fiction section from the total number of books the library should have.
4) 91 - 71 = 20
Therefore, the library needs to add 20 more books to the fiction section to reach the targeted total of 91 books.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At an art store, there are 36 blue colored pencils and a customer bought one. How many blue colored pencils are left at the store after the customer's purchase?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Initially, there were 36 blue colored pencils at the art store.
The customer bought 1 blue colored pencil.
Therefore, the number of blue colored pencils left at the store is 36 - 1 = 35.
### Answer: 35

Expected answer: 35

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous purchase, let's imagine that the store initially stocked 5 blue colored pencils instead of 36. If a customer bought one, how many blue colored pencils would be left at the store after the customer's purchase?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Initially, there were 5 blue colored pencils at the art store.
The customer bought 1 blue colored pencil.
Therefore, the number of blue colored pencils left at the store is 5 - 1 = 4.
### Answer: 4

Expected answer: 4

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A sandwich shop starts the day with 18 sandwiches. Over the morning they make an additional 39 sandwiches. How many sandwiches does the sandwich shop have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The sandwich shop starts the day with 18 sandwiches.
They make an additional 39 sandwiches over the morning.
To find the total number of sandwiches, we add the initial 18 sandwiches and the additional 39 sandwiches:
18 + 39 = 57 sandwiches.

### Answer: 57

Expected answer: 57

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from our previous scenario, what if the sandwich shop had started the day with 78 sandwiches instead of 18? After they make an additional 18 sandwiches over the morning, how many sandwiches does the sandwich shop have in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:

1. The sandwich shop starts the day with 78 sandwiches.
2. They make an additional 18 sandwiches over the morning.
3. To find the total number of sandwiches, we add the initial 78 sandwiches and the additional 18 sandwiches:
   78 + 18 = 96 sandwiches.

### Answer: 96

Expected answer: 96

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The moon's orbit is known to be approximately 99 days long. Due to some anomalies, there were 76 days of complete visibility from Earth. How many days the moon was not visible from Earth?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The moon's orbit is approximately 99 days long
* There were 76 days of complete visibility from Earth
* To find the number of days the moon was not visible from Earth, we need to subtract the number of visible days from the total number of days in the orbit

Calculation:
* Total days in the moon's orbit: 99 days
* Days of complete visibility: 76 days
* Days the moon was not visible: 99 days - 76 days = 23 days

### Answer: 23 days

Expected answer: 23

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the scenario where the moon's orbit is known to be approximately 99 days long and there were 87 days of complete visibility from Earth instead of 76, how many days would the moon not be visible from Earth in that case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The moon's orbit is approximately 99 days long
* There were 87 days of complete visibility from Earth
* To find the number of days the moon was not visible from Earth, we need to subtract the number of visible days from the total number of days in the orbit

Calculation:
* Total days in the moon's orbit: 99 days
* Days of complete visibility: 87 days
* Days the moon was not visible: 99 days - 87 days = 12 days

### Answer: 12 days

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A camping store starts the day with 60 sleeping bags. By mid-day, they've managed to sell 7 of them. How many sleeping bags does the store have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The store started the day with 60 sleeping bags.
They sold 7 sleeping bags by mid-day.
The number of sleeping bags left is 60 - 7 = 53.
### Answer: 53

Expected answer: 53

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In our previous scenario, the camping store started the day with 60 sleeping bags and 7 were sold by mid-day. Now consider a new situation: The camping store starts the day with the same quantity of sleeping bags (60), but this time, they manage to sell 26 sleeping bags by mid-day instead of 7. How many sleeping bags does the store have left now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The store started the day with 60 sleeping bags.
They sold 26 sleeping bags by mid-day.
The number of sleeping bags left is 60 - 26 = 34.
### Answer: 34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Mary, a passionate baker, bakes 77 oatmeal cookies on Saturday and decides to bake another 15 on Sunday. How many oatmeal cookies did she bake over the weekend?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Mary baked 77 oatmeal cookies on Saturday.
Mary baked an additional 15 oatmeal cookies on Sunday.
The total number of oatmeal cookies baked over the weekend is 77 + 15 = <<77 + 15 = 92>>92.
### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Mary, a passionate baker, bakes 77 oatmeal cookies on Saturday and decides to bake another 15 on Sunday. However, during the packaging process, 87 cookies were accidentally damaged and could not be sold. How many usable oatmeal cookies did she have left over?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Mary baked 77 oatmeal cookies on Saturday and 15 on Sunday, for a total of 77 + 15 = 92 cookies.
However, 87 of the cookies were accidentally damaged and could not be sold.
The number of usable oatmeal cookies left over is 92 - 87 = <<92 - 87 = 5>>5.
### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Mary, a passionate baker, decides to change her baking plan. Instead of baking 77 oatmeal cookies on Saturday, she baked only 10. She still baked 15 more on Sunday. How many oatmeal cookies did she bake over the weekend with this new plan?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Mary baked 10 oatmeal cookies on Saturday.
Mary baked an additional 15 oatmeal cookies on Sunday.
The total number of oatmeal cookies baked over the weekend is 10 + 15 = <<10 + 15 = 25>>25.
### Answer: 25

Expected answer: 25

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A paint store received a new shipment of 40 cans of red paint. Over the course of a day, they sold 15 cans. How many cans of red paint are left in the store?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The paint store received 40 cans of red paint.
They sold 15 cans over the course of a day.
To find the number of cans of red paint left in the store, we need to subtract the number of cans sold from the total number of cans received.
40 cans - 15 cans = <<40 - 15 = 25>>25 cans of red paint are left in the store.

### Answer: 25

Expected answer: 25

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: If instead the paint store had originally received a shipment of 54 cans of red paint, how many cans would they have left after selling the same amount (15 cans)?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The paint store originally received 54 cans of red paint.
They sold 15 cans over the course of a day.
To find the number of cans of red paint left in the store, we need to subtract the number of cans sold from the total number of cans received.
54 cans - 15 cans = <<54 - 15 = 39>>39 cans of red paint are left in the store.

### Answer: 39

Expected answer: 39

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: On Tuesday, a town received 49 inches of snow. Later the same week, an additional 32 inches of snowfall was recorded. What is the total amount of snowfall received by the town within the week?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* On Tuesday, the town received 49 inches of snow.
* Later in the same week, an additional 32 inches of snowfall was recorded.

To find the total amount of snowfall received by the town within the week, we need to add the two amounts together:
* 49 inches + 32 inches = 81 inches

### Answer: 81

Expected answer: 81

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A juice bar sold 61 apple juices in the morning. In the afternoon they sold an additional 14 apple juices. How many apple juices were sold in the entire day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the morning, the juice bar sold 61 apple juices.
In the afternoon, the juice bar sold an additional 14 apple juices.
To find the total number of apple juices sold in the entire day, we need to add the morning and afternoon sales.
Total apple juices sold = Morning sales + Afternoon sales
Total apple juices sold = 61 + 14 = 75

### Answer: 75

Expected answer: 75

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the juice bar sold 61 apple juices in the morning and 14 more in the afternoon, an evening rush of customers bought 7 more apple juices. How many apple juices were sold in total for the entire day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the morning, the juice bar sold 61 apple juices.
In the afternoon, the juice bar sold an additional 14 apple juices.
In the evening, the juice bar sold an additional 7 apple juices.
To find the total number of apple juices sold in the entire day, we need to add the morning, afternoon, and evening sales.
Total apple juices sold = Morning sales + Afternoon sales + Evening sales
Total apple juices sold = 61 + 14 + 7 = 82

### Answer: 82

Expected answer: 82

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: If the juice bar initially sold 57 apple juices in the morning instead of 61, and they still sold 14 more in the afternoon, how many apple juices would they have sold in total for the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the morning, the juice bar sold 57 apple juices
* In the afternoon, they sold an additional 14 apple juices
* To find the total apple juices sold in the day, we add the morning and afternoon sales:
Total apple juices sold = Morning sales + Afternoon sales
Total apple juices sold = 57 + 14 = 71

### Answer: 71

Expected answer: 71

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A furniture store has a stock of 78 king size beds. During a big sale, they manage to sell 50 of these beds. How many of these king size beds are left in the store if the number of beds left was duplicated due to a manufacturing error?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The furniture store originally had 78 king size beds in stock.
2) During the big sale, they sold 50 of these beds.
3) So the number of beds left in the store is 78 - 50 = 28.
4) However, due to a manufacturing error, the number of beds left was duplicated.
5) So the final number of king size beds left in the store is 28 x 2 = 56.

### Answer: 56

Expected answer: 56

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A librarian receives a new shipment of books. The shipment consists of 96 books in addition to the special edition copy she was expecting. How many books did the librarian receive in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The librarian received 96 books in the new shipment, plus the special edition copy she was expecting.
Therefore, the total number of books the librarian received is 96 + 1 = <<96+1=97>>97.
### Answer: 97

Expected answer: 97

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After receiving her book shipment, the librarian realizes that there were two books missing from the shipment due to a packing error. How many books did the librarian end up with in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The librarian initially received 97 books (96 from the shipment plus the special edition copy).
However, there were two books missing due to a packing error.
Therefore, the total number of books the librarian ended up with is 97 - 2 = <<97-2=95>>95.
### Answer: 95

Expected answer: 95

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if, originally, the librarian was only expecting 82 books instead of 96 from the shipment, in addition to the special edition copy she was expecting? How many books would the librarian have received then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The librarian was expecting 82 books in the shipment, plus the special edition copy
* The actual shipment contained 96 books, plus the special edition copy
* So the total number of books the librarian received is:
  - The 82 books she was expecting
  - Plus the 96 books that were actually in the shipment
  - Plus the 1 special edition copy
* Therefore, the total number of books the librarian received is:
  - 82 + 96 + 1 = <<82 + 96 + 1 = 179>>179

### Answer: 179

Expected answer: 83

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: A furniture shop has 24 tables in the showroom. They brought 65 more tables from the warehouse. How many tables does the furniture shop have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The furniture shop originally had 24 tables in the showroom.
* They then brought in 65 more tables from the warehouse.
* To find the total number of tables the shop has now, we add the original 24 tables to the 65 new tables:
* 24 + 65 = 89

### Answer: 89

Expected answer: 89

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the existing stock, the furniture shop decides to bring in a new collection from overseas. The total number of tables they want on display is 91. Now that they've added tables from the warehouse, how many additional tables do they need from the overseas collection to reach their target?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The furniture shop originally had 24 tables in the showroom
* They then brought in 65 more tables from the warehouse
* So the total number of tables they have now is 24 + 65 = 89 tables
* The total number of tables they want on display is 91
* To find how many additional tables they need from the overseas collection, we subtract the current number of tables (89) from the target number of tables (91):
* 91 - 89 = 2

### Answer: 2

Expected answer: 2

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Initially, the furniture shop had 24 tables. But what if they had started with 25 tables instead? If they still add 65 tables from the warehouse, how many tables would the furniture shop have in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

* Originally, the furniture shop had 25 tables in the showroom (instead of 24 as in the previous problem)
* They then brought in 65 more tables from the warehouse
* To find the total number of tables the shop has now, we add the original 25 tables to the 65 new tables:
* 25 + 65 = 90

### Answer: 90

Expected answer: 90

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: John has a lucky number of 74. One afternoon, he decides to add 4 to his lucky number. What is his new number?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: John's original lucky number is 74.
He decides to add 4 to his lucky number.
74 + 4 = <<74 + 4 = 78>>78
### Answer: 78

Expected answer: 78

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: John has a lucky number of 74. One afternoon, he decides to add 4 to his lucky number for an experiment. This gives him a new number. Then, he decides to make his number even more unique by subtracting 50 from it. What is John's final number after all these changes?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
1. John's original lucky number is 74.
2. He adds 4 to his lucky number: 74 + 4 = 78
3. He then subtracts 50 from the new number: 78 - 50 = <<78 - 50 = 28>>28
### Answer: 28

Expected answer: 28

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose John started with a different lucky number, originally 50. Can you imagine if he still wanted to add 4 to it just like before? What would be his new number in that case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: If John's original lucky number was 50, and he added 4 to it, then his new number would be:
50 + 4 = <<50 + 4 = 54>>54
### Answer: 54

Expected answer: 54

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Sarah has 56 bracelet beads, and she uses 37 of them to make a new bracelet. She then decides to make a second bracelet with a different design, and this one uses 36 beads. But since she used some beads to make the first bracelet, she has less than 36 beads left. How many beads does she need to buy to finish the second bracelet?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Sarah has 56 bracelet beads to start with.
2. She uses 37 beads to make the first bracelet.
3. This leaves her with 56 - 37 = 19 beads remaining.
4. She then decides to make a second bracelet that requires 36 beads.
5. Since she only has 19 beads left, she needs to buy additional beads to complete the second bracelet.
6. The number of beads she needs to buy is 36 - 19 = 17 beads.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Sarah has 56 bracelet beads and she uses 37 to make the first bracelet. She then plans to make a larger, more intricate second bracelet. But unlike before, this one requires 84 beads instead of 36. Using the beads she still has from the initial 56 beads, how many more beads will she need to complete the second bracelet?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
1. Sarah starts with 56 bracelet beads.
2. She uses 37 beads to make the first bracelet.
3. This leaves her with 56 - 37 = 19 beads remaining.
4. The second bracelet requires 84 beads.
5. Since she only has 19 beads left from the initial 56, she will need to buy additional beads to complete the second bracelet.
6. The number of additional beads she needs to buy is 84 - 19 = 65 beads.

### Answer: 65

Expected answer: 65

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: For Sam's birthday party, he invites 6 of his neighborhood friends. Later, he decides to invite 10 more friends from school. How many friends in total is he inviting to his party?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Sam initially invites 6 of his neighborhood friends to the party.
2) Later, he decides to invite 10 more friends from school.
3) To find the total number of friends he is inviting, we add the two numbers together:
6 neighborhood friends + 10 school friends = <<6 + 10 = 16>>16 friends in total.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Sam had some additional thoughts about his guest list for the birthday party. After inviting 6 of his neighborhood friends and 10 more friends from school, he had to uninvite 4 friends due to space limitations at the party venue. How many friends does he now have on his party invitation list?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Sam initially invited 6 neighborhood friends and 10 school friends, for a total of 16 friends.
2) After that, he had to uninvite 4 friends due to space limitations.
3) To find the final number of friends on the party invitation list, we take the initial 16 friends and subtract the 4 friends he uninvited:
16 friends - 4 friends uninvited = <<16 - 4 = 12>>12 friends on the final party invitation list.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Sam was reviewing the list of guests for his birthday party again. Instead of inviting 10 friends from school, he decided to invite 68 of his school friends. He still had 6 friends from his neighborhood on the list. With this new plan, how many friends is he inviting to his party in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Sam initially had 6 neighborhood friends on the list.
2) He then decided to invite 68 school friends instead of the original 10.
3) To find the total number of friends he is inviting, we add the two numbers together:
6 neighborhood friends + 68 school friends = <<6 + 68 = 74>>74 friends in total.

### Answer: 74

Expected answer: 74

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In an underwater exploration, a biologist counted 43 sharks in one area. Later, they encountered an additional 27 sharks in a different area. How many sharks did the biologist encounter in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The biologist counted 43 sharks in one area.
The biologist then encountered an additional 27 sharks in a different area.
To find the total number of sharks encountered, we add the two numbers together:
43 + 27 = 70

### Answer: 70

Expected answer: 70

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of 43 sharks as initially counted in the first underwater area, the biologist had actually spotted 39 sharks. If the biologist still encountered an additional 27 in a different area, how many sharks did they encounter in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:

1. In the first underwater area, the biologist spotted 39 sharks.
2. In the second underwater area, the biologist encountered an additional 27 sharks.
3. To find the total number of sharks encountered, we add the two numbers together:
   39 + 27 = 66

### Answer: 66

Expected answer: 66

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Jenna has 36 beads to make necklace. She purchased 5 more beads from the store. How many beads does she have in total for making necklaces?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Jenna originally had 36 beads
* She then purchased 5 more beads from the store
* To find the total number of beads she has for making necklaces, we add the original 36 beads to the 5 additional beads she purchased:
* 36 + 5 = 41

### Answer: 41

Expected answer: 41

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After making some necklaces, Jenna decides she wants to create a more complex design. She goes back to the store and purchases 57 more beads. How many beads does she have now in total for her necklace making?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Originally, Jenna had 41 beads (from the previous problem)
* She then purchased 57 more beads from the store
* To find the total number of beads she has now, we add the original 41 beads to the 57 additional beads she purchased:
* 41 + 57 = 98

### Answer: 98

Expected answer: 98

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Jenna originally had 65 beads instead of 36. She still bought an additional 5 beads from the store. How many beads would she have in total for making necklaces then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Jenna originally had 65 beads
* She then purchased 5 more beads from the store
* To find the total number of beads she has for making necklaces, we add the original 65 beads to the 5 additional beads she purchased:
* 65 + 5 = 70

### Answer: 70

Expected answer: 70

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There are initially 83 ballerinas in a large ballet school auditioning for Swan Lake. After the first round of auditions, 49 ballerinas are eliminated. How many ballerinas are left for the next round of auditions?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 83 ballerinas auditioning for Swan Lake.
* After the first round of auditions, 49 ballerinas were eliminated.
* To find the number of ballerinas left for the next round, we need to subtract the number of eliminated ballerinas from the initial number of ballerinas.

83 ballerinas - 49 eliminated ballerinas = <<83 - 49 = 34>>34 ballerinas left for the next round of auditions.

### Answer: 34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: On Monday, a train station sold 21 tickets. The next day, they sold an astonishing 76 more tickets. How many tickets did the train station sell in total over these two days?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* On Monday, the train station sold 21 tickets.
* On Tuesday, the train station sold 76 more tickets than on Monday.
* To find the total number of tickets sold over the two days, we add the number of tickets sold on Monday and Tuesday.

The number of tickets sold on Tuesday is 21 + 76 = 97.

The total number of tickets sold over the two days is:
* Monday: 21 tickets
* Tuesday: 97 tickets
* Total: 21 + 97 = 118 tickets

### Answer: 118

Expected answer: 97

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: Captain Bluebeard's pirate ship has 57 crew members at the start of their voyage. After a rough storm, 40 of them decide to abandon ship at the next port. How many crew members are left on Captain Bluebeard's ship?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Captain Bluebeard's pirate ship had 57 crew members at the start of their voyage.
After the storm, 40 crew members decided to abandon ship at the next port.
The number of crew members left on Captain Bluebeard's ship is 57 - 40 = <<57-40=17>>17.
### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the 40 crew members abandon Captain Bluebeard's ship, he drafts 25 new scurvy sea dogs from a nearby ruffian-filled tavern. After this recruitment, how many crew members are now aboard Captain Bluebeard's ship?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Initially, Captain Bluebeard's ship had 57 crew members.
After 40 crew members abandoned the ship, there were 57 - 40 = 17 crew members left.
Captain Bluebeard then recruited 25 new crew members from a nearby tavern.
The total number of crew members now aboard Captain Bluebeard's ship is 17 + 25 = <<17+25=42>>42.
### Answer: 42

Expected answer: 42

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: If initially, Captain Bluebeard's pirate ship had 57 crew members and instead of 40, only 32 decided to disembark after the rough storm, how many crew members would be left on Captain Bluebeard's ship then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: Initially, Captain Bluebeard's pirate ship had 57 crew members.
After the storm, 32 crew members decided to disembark.
The number of crew members left on Captain Bluebeard's ship is 57 - 32 = <<57-32=25>>25.
### Answer: 25

Expected answer: 25

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A fashion store has 52 pairs of sunglasses in stock. After a dramatic display of summer sale, they sold 42 pairs of sunglasses by the end of the day. How many pairs of sunglasses are there in stock after the sale?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The fashion store had 52 pairs of sunglasses in stock initially.
They sold 42 pairs of sunglasses during the sale.
To find the number of pairs of sunglasses remaining in stock, we need to subtract the number of pairs sold from the initial stock.
52 pairs - 42 pairs sold = <<52 - 42 = 10>>10 pairs of sunglasses remaining in stock.
### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reevaluating their sale records, the fashion store management realized they had actually sold 36 pairs, not 42, on the big summer sale day. Given this, how many pairs of sunglasses were actually left in stock after that day's sale?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The fashion store had 52 pairs of sunglasses in stock initially.
They sold 36 pairs of sunglasses during the sale.
To find the number of pairs of sunglasses remaining in stock, we need to subtract the number of pairs sold from the initial stock.
52 pairs - 36 pairs sold = <<52 - 36 = 16>>16 pairs of sunglasses remaining in stock.
### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: You have correctly answered 66 questions on a test. However, upon review, it is discovered that 4 of those answers were marked correctly by mistake. After correcting the mistakes, how many questions have you actually answered correctly?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* You originally answered 66 questions correctly on the test.
* However, it was discovered that 4 of those answers were marked correctly by mistake.
* So, we need to subtract the 4 questions that were incorrectly marked as correct.

The calculation is:
* Original number of correct answers: 66
* Minus the 4 answers that were incorrectly marked as correct: 66 - 4 = 62

### Answer: 62

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After correcting the mistakes, you correctly answered 66 - 4 questions. To make up for the mistaken marks, your teacher allows you to answer 16 bonus questions, all of which you answer correctly. After adding your correct answers from the bonus questions, how many questions have you answered correctly in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Originally, you answered 66 questions correctly
* But 4 of those were marked correctly by mistake
* So after correcting the mistakes, you had 66 - 4 = 62 questions answered correctly
* Then, you were allowed to answer 16 bonus questions, all of which you answered correctly

To calculate the total number of questions answered correctly:
* Original correct answers: 62
* Bonus questions answered correctly: 16
* Total correct answers: 62 + 16 = 78

### Answer: 78

Expected answer: 78

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Originally, you answered correctly 80 questions on the test. However, upon review, it is discovered that 4 of those answers were marked correctly by mistake. After correcting the mistakes, how many questions have you actually answered correctly now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* You originally answered 80 questions correctly on the test.
* However, it was discovered that 4 of those answers were marked correctly by mistake.
* So, we need to subtract the 4 questions that were incorrectly marked as correct.

The calculation is:
* Original number of correct answers: 80
* Minus the 4 answers that were incorrectly marked as correct: 80 - 4 = 76

### Answer: 76

Expected answer: 76

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A craft store had 54 cans of red paint in stock. Yesterday, they received a new shipment containing an additional 31 cans of red paint. How many cans of red paint does the craft store now have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The craft store had 54 cans of red paint in stock initially.
They received a new shipment of 31 additional cans of red paint.
To find the total number of cans of red paint the craft store now has, we add the initial amount and the new shipment:
54 + 31 = <<54 + 31 = 85>>85 cans of red paint.
### Answer: 85

Expected answer: 85

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the craft store with the 54 original cans of red paint plus the additional 31 cans from the shipment, 14 cans were sold today. After this sale, how many cans of red paint does the craft store now have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The craft store initially had 54 cans of red paint.
They received a new shipment of 31 additional cans, making the total 54 + 31 = 85 cans.
After the sale, 14 cans were sold.
To find the number of cans left, we subtract the number of cans sold from the total number of cans:
85 - 14 = <<85 - 14 = 71>>71 cans of red paint.
### Answer: 71

Expected answer: 71

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In our previous problem, the craft store had an initial stock of 54 cans of red paint and received a shipment of an additional 31 cans. Now, imagine if they initially had 54 cans of paint and then received a smaller shipment containing only 4 cans of red paint. How many cans of red paint would the craft store now have in the new scenario?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: In the new scenario, the craft store initially had 54 cans of red paint.
They then received a smaller shipment of 4 additional cans of red paint.
To find the total number of cans of red paint the craft store now has, we add the initial amount and the new shipment:
54 + 4 = <<54 + 4 = 58>>58 cans of red paint.
### Answer: 58

Expected answer: 58

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At a mobile phone store, they have 80 models of the latest smartphone. Later on, they receive an additional 7 models of the same from the warehouse. How many models of that smartphone does the store have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The store initially had 80 models of the latest smartphone.
They later received an additional 7 models from the warehouse.
To find the total number of models the store has now, we add the initial number of models and the additional models received:
80 + 7 = <<80 + 7 = 87>>87 models.
### Answer: 87

Expected answer: 87

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In continuation of the previous situation at the mobile phone store where they have 87 models of the latest smartphone, they sell 21 of these models by the end of the day. How many models of that smartphone does the store have left after the sales?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The store initially had 87 models of the latest smartphone.
They then sold 21 of these models.
To find the number of models the store has left, we subtract the number of models sold from the initial number of models:
87 - 21 = <<87 - 21 = 66>>66 models.
### Answer: 66

Expected answer: 66

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Now let's consider a different scenario at the mobile phone store. Instead of initially having 80 models of the latest smartphone, they have 17 models. They then receive an additional 7 models of the same from the warehouse. How many models of that smartphone does the store have in total now in this new scenario?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: In this new scenario, the store initially had 17 models of the latest smartphone.
They later received an additional 7 models from the warehouse.
To find the total number of models the store has now, we add the initial number of models and the additional models received:
17 + 7 = <<17 + 7 = 24>>24 models.
### Answer: 24

Expected answer: 24

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Jake was blowing bubbles with his bubble wand. He blew 73 bubbles in total, but 62 of them popped. How many bubbles remained?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Jake blew a total of 73 bubbles
* 62 of those bubbles popped
* To find the number of bubbles that remained, we need to subtract the number of popped bubbles from the total number of bubbles

73 bubbles - 62 popped bubbles = <<73 - 62 = 11>>11 bubbles remained.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After Jake's 62 bubbles had popped out of the total 73 bubbles he had blown, his sister joined in the fun and started blowing bubbles too. She managed to blow 72 bubbles without any of them popping. How many bubbles were there in total, between Jake's remaining bubbles and the bubbles his sister blew?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Jake blew a total of 73 bubbles
* 62 of those bubbles popped, leaving 73 - 62 = 11 bubbles remaining
* Jake's sister then blew 72 bubbles without any of them popping
* To find the total number of bubbles, we add Jake's remaining bubbles and his sister's bubbles:

11 (Jake's remaining bubbles) + 72 (sister's bubbles) = <<11 + 72 = 83>>83 bubbles in total.

### Answer: 83

Expected answer: 83

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's revise our previous scenario slightly. Now, instead of 62 of Jake's 73 bubbles popping, 64 of them popped. With this new amount, how many bubbles remained after Jake had been playing?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Jake blew a total of 73 bubbles
* 64 of those bubbles popped
* To find the number of bubbles that remained, we need to subtract the number of popped bubbles from the total number of bubbles

73 bubbles - 64 popped bubbles = <<73 - 64 = 9>>9 bubbles remained.

### Answer: 9

Expected answer: 9

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer has 86 apples in his orchard. After a day of harvesting, he picks 22 apples. How many apples does he have left remaining on the trees?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The farmer initially had 86 apples in his orchard.
After harvesting, he picked 22 apples.
To find the number of apples remaining on the trees, we need to subtract the number of apples picked from the initial number of apples.
86 apples - 22 apples = 64 apples remaining on the trees.

### Answer: 64

Expected answer: 64

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Assuming the farmer originally had fewer apples in his orchard. Let's say he had 78 apples instead of 86. After a day of harvesting, he still picks 22 apples. How many apples would he then have left on the trees?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:

* The farmer originally had 78 apples in his orchard
* After a day of harvesting, he picked 22 apples
* To find the number of apples remaining on the trees, we subtract the number of apples picked from the initial number of apples:
* 78 apples - 22 apples = 56 apples remaining on the trees

### Answer: 56

Expected answer: 56

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were initially 8 clouds in the sky and later 9 more clouds appeared. How many clouds are in the sky now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 8 clouds in the sky.
Later, 9 more clouds appeared.
To find the total number of clouds in the sky now, we add the initial number of clouds and the number of clouds that appeared later.
8 + 9 = 17
### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After counting 8 clouds and then 9 more, suddenly, a group of 54 more clouds rapidly rolled in. How many clouds are in the sky now, in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 8 clouds in the sky.
Then, 9 more clouds appeared.
After that, a group of 54 more clouds rapidly rolled in.
To find the total number of clouds in the sky now, we add the initial number of clouds, the number of clouds that appeared later, and the group of 54 clouds that rolled in.
8 + 9 + 54 = 71
### Answer: 71

Expected answer: 71

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After revising the initial observation, it turns out that there were actually 40 clouds in the sky to begin with instead of 8. Then, 9 more clouds appeared. Given this new total, how many clouds are in the sky now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this with the new information.

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 40 clouds in the sky.
Later, 9 more clouds appeared.
To find the total number of clouds in the sky now, we add the initial number of clouds and the number of clouds that appeared later.
40 + 9 = 49

### Answer: 49

Expected answer: 49

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Peter has 18 toothbrushes in his store. In the morning, his supplier delivered an additional bunch of toothbrushes equal to the ones he already had in store. How many toothbrushes does Peter have in his store now after the delivery?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Peter initially had 18 toothbrushes in his store.
The supplier delivered an additional bunch of toothbrushes equal to the ones he already had in store.
So, the additional number of toothbrushes delivered is 18.
The total number of toothbrushes in the store now is 18 + 18 = 36.

### Answer: 36

Expected answer: 36

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Peter has 18 toothbrushes in his store. In the morning, his supplier delivered an additional bunch of toothbrushes equal to the ones he already had in store. Later in the afternoon, the supplier brought another shipment of 56 toothbrushes. Now, how many toothbrushes does Peter have in his store after both deliveries?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Peter initially had 18 toothbrushes in his store.
2. In the morning, the supplier delivered an additional bunch of toothbrushes equal to the ones he already had in store, which is 18 more.
3. So after the first delivery, Peter had 18 + 18 = 36 toothbrushes.
4. Later in the afternoon, the supplier brought another shipment of 56 toothbrushes.
5. So the total number of toothbrushes Peter has in his store after both deliveries is 36 + 56 = 92.

### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's reconsider the previous scenario, but instead of starting off with 18 toothbrushes in the store, Peter now starts off with 15 toothbrushes. In the morning, his supplier delivered an additional bunch of toothbrushes equal to the ones he already had in store. Now, how many toothbrushes does Peter have in his store after this morning's delivery?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* Peter initially had 15 toothbrushes in his store.
* The supplier delivered an additional bunch of toothbrushes equal to the ones he already had in store.
* The additional number of toothbrushes delivered is 15.
* The total number of toothbrushes in the store now is 15 + 15 = 30.

### Answer: 30

Expected answer: 30

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer has a field where he harvested 74 cucumbers. However, having checked them, he found out that 23 of them were not good to sell. How many cucumbers does he have left that are fit for sale?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The farmer harvested 74 cucumbers in total
* However, 23 of those cucumbers were not good to sell
* To find the number of cucumbers that are fit for sale, we need to subtract the number of bad cucumbers from the total number of cucumbers

So, the calculation is:
Total cucumbers harvested - Bad cucumbers = Cucumbers fit for sale
74 - 23 = <<74 - 23 = 51>>51

### Answer: 51

Expected answer: 51

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: A farmer has a field where he harvested 74 cucumbers. However, having checked them, he found out that 23 of them were not good to sell. Then, on the next day, he manages to pick an additional 21 cucumbers that are good to sell. How many cucumbers fit for sale does he have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The farmer initially harvested 74 cucumbers
* Out of the 74 cucumbers, 23 were not good to sell
* So the number of good cucumbers initially was 74 - 23 = 51
* Then, the farmer picked an additional 21 good cucumbers
* To find the total number of good cucumbers, we add the initial good cucumbers and the additional good cucumbers:
* Initial good cucumbers + Additional good cucumbers = Total good cucumbers
* 51 + 21 = <<51 + 21 = 72>>72

### Answer: 72

Expected answer: 72

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a magical undersea kingdom, there are 26 mermaids in the Coral tribe and 61 mermaids in the Kelp tribe. How many mermaids are there in total in the kingdom?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There are 26 mermaids in the Coral tribe
* There are 61 mermaids in the Kelp tribe
* To find the total number of mermaids in the kingdom, we need to add the number of mermaids in the Coral tribe and the Kelp tribe.

So, the total number of mermaids in the kingdom is:
26 (Coral tribe) + 61 (Kelp tribe) = <<26 + 61 = 87>>87

### Answer: 87

Expected answer: 87

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At a pizza party, 25 people order a Margherita pizza and another 29 people order a Pepperoni pizza. How many pizzas are ordered in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* 25 people ordered a Margherita pizza
* 29 people ordered a Pepperoni pizza
* To find the total number of pizzas ordered, we add the number of Margherita pizzas and the number of Pepperoni pizzas:
* 25 Margherita pizzas + 29 Pepperoni pizzas = 54 pizzas ordered in total.

### Answer: 54

Expected answer: 54

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: At the pizza party, a total of 100 pizzas were prepared by the chef. After the first round of orders, 25 people order a Margherita pizza and another 29 people order a Pepperoni pizza. How many pizzas are still left unclaimed?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Total pizzas prepared: 100
* Margherita pizzas ordered: 25
* Pepperoni pizzas ordered: 29
* Total pizzas ordered in the first round: 25 + 29 = 54
* Pizzas still left unclaimed: 100 - 54 = 46

### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: At the same pizza party, suppose that in the first round of orders, 43 people (not 25) decided to order a Margherita pizza, while 29 people still ordered a Pepperoni pizza. In this case, how many pizzas were ordered in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the first round, 43 people ordered a Margherita pizza
* 29 people ordered a Pepperoni pizza
* To find the total number of pizzas ordered, we add the number of Margherita pizzas and the number of Pepperoni pizzas:
* 43 Margherita pizzas + 29 Pepperoni pizzas = 72 pizzas ordered in total.

### Answer: 72

Expected answer: 72

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: You are trying to solve for a missing number. The larger number is 88 and the difference between this larger number and the missing number is 78. What is the missing number?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The larger number is 88
* The difference between the larger number and the missing number is 78

To find the missing number, we need to subtract the difference from the larger number:
* Larger number: 88
* Difference: 78
* Missing number = Larger number - Difference
* Missing number = 88 - 78 = 10

### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After finding the missing number, now add this number to the difference which is 78. What is the new total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's continue the problem:
* The missing number is 10
* The difference between the larger number and the missing number is 78

Now we need to add the missing number (10) to the difference (78) to get the new total.

* Missing number: 10
* Difference: 78
* New total = Missing number + Difference
* New total = 10 + 78 = 88

### Answer: 88

Expected answer: 88

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Consider the same scenario, but originally the missing number was 61 instead of 78. What would the difference between the larger number of 88 and this new missing number be?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:
* The larger number is 88
* The missing number is 61
* To find the difference, we subtract the missing number from the larger number:
* Larger number: 88
* Missing number: 61
* Difference = Larger number - Missing number
* Difference = 88 - 61 = 27

### Answer: 27

Expected answer: 27

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: John has 46 computer games in his collection. He just received a gift of an additional 11 games for his birthday. How many computer games does John have now in his collection?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: John had 46 computer games in his collection initially.
He received an additional 11 games as a gift.
Therefore, the total number of computer games John has now in his collection is 46 + 11 = <<46 + 11 = 57>>57.
### Answer: 57

Expected answer: 57

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After John added the 11 games to his collection, his family surprised him with the goal of having a total of 88 games in his collection. How many more games does John need to reach his new goal?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: John's new goal is to have a total of 88 games in his collection.
He currently has 57 games in his collection.
To reach his new goal of 88 games, he needs to add 88 - 57 = <<88 - 57 = 31>>31 more games.
### Answer: 31

Expected answer: 31

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Assume instead that John originally had 49 computer games in his collection before his birthday. If he still received an additional 11 games for his birthday, how many computer games does John have now in his collection?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: John originally had 49 computer games in his collection.
He received an additional 11 games as a gift.
Therefore, the total number of computer games John has now in his collection is 49 + 11 = <<49 + 11 = 60>>60.
### Answer: 60

Expected answer: 60

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Captain Jack has 1 golden coin. His first mate, Sparrow, gives him an additional 82 golden coins from their latest bounty. How many golden coins does Captain Jack have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Captain Jack initially had 1 golden coin.
Sparrow gave him an additional 82 golden coins.
Therefore, the total number of golden coins Captain Jack has now is 1 + 82 = 83.

### Answer: 83

Expected answer: 83

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After Captain Jack counts his coins, another crew member hands him 9 more gold coins that they found hidden away. Now, how many gold coins does Captain Jack have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, Captain Jack had 1 golden coin.
* His first mate, Sparrow, gave him an additional 82 golden coins.
* So at this point, Captain Jack had a total of 1 + 82 = 83 golden coins.
* Then, another crew member handed him 9 more gold coins.
* So the new total number of golden coins Captain Jack has is 83 + 9 = 92.

### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After re-checking the bounty they brought in, it turns out Sparrow had mistakenly counted and he had only given Captain Jack 79 coins initially, not 82. Now, how many golden coins does Captain Jack have given this new count?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's re-work this with the new information.

Reasoning:
* Captain Jack initially had 1 golden coin.
* Sparrow gave him an additional 79 golden coins, not 82 as initially stated.
* Therefore, the total number of golden coins Captain Jack has now is 1 + 79 = 80.

### Answer: 80

Expected answer: 80

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A paint store received a shipment of 100 cans of paint. Then they sold 53 cans. How many cans of paint do they have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The paint store received a shipment of 100 cans of paint.
They then sold 53 cans of paint.
To find the number of cans of paint they have left, we subtract the number of cans sold from the total number of cans received:
100 - 53 = <<100 - 53 = 47>>47 cans of paint left.
### Answer: 47

Expected answer: 47

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After selling 53 cans of paint out of their shipment of 100, the paint store then relocated 16 cans to another outlet. How many cans of paint does the store have in stock now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The paint store originally had 100 cans of paint.
They then sold 53 cans, leaving them with 100 - 53 = 47 cans.
After that, they relocated 16 cans to another outlet.
To find the number of cans the store has in stock now, we subtract the 16 cans that were relocated from the 47 cans they had left:
47 - 16 = <<47 - 16 = 31>>31 cans of paint in stock.
### Answer: 31

Expected answer: 31

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Instead of receiving a shipment of 100 cans of paint, the store initially received 88 cans. If they still sold 53 cans, how many cans of paint would they have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The paint store initially received 88 cans of paint.
They then sold 53 cans of paint.
To find the number of cans of paint they have left, we subtract the number of cans sold from the total number of cans received:
88 - 53 = <<88 - 53 = 35>>35 cans of paint left.
### Answer: 35

Expected answer: 35

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In Yellowstone National Park, rangers have spotted 42 brown bears this year. In the same time, they have spotted an additional 54 grizzly bears. How many bears have they spotted in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The rangers have spotted 42 brown bears and 54 grizzly bears.
To find the total number of bears spotted, we need to add the number of brown bears and grizzly bears together.
42 brown bears + 54 grizzly bears = <<42 + 54 = 96>>96 bears in total.

### Answer: 96

Expected answer: 96

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Upon further review, the rangers realized they made a mistake in their first count of brown bears. There were actually only 27 brown bears instead of 42. With this revised count and keeping the count for grizzly bears the same, how many bears have they spotted now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's recalculate the total number of bears spotted with the revised count of brown bears.

Revised number of brown bears: 27
Number of grizzly bears: 54

Total number of bears spotted:
27 brown bears + 54 grizzly bears = <<27 + 54 = 81>>81 bears in total.

### Answer: 81

Expected answer: 81

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A popular bookstore initially has 85 books of a best selling novel in stock. They receive an additional shipment of 11 books of the same novel. What is the total number of this novel the bookstore now has?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The bookstore initially had 85 books of the best selling novel in stock.
They then received an additional shipment of 11 books of the same novel.
To find the total number of this novel the bookstore now has, we add the initial number of books and the additional shipment:
85 + 11 = <<85 + 11 = 96>>96
### Answer: 96

Expected answer: 96

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the bookstore originally had 88 books of the best selling novel in stock instead of 85 before receiving the additional shipment of 11 books. How many of the novel does the bookstore have now in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The bookstore originally had 88 books of the best selling novel in stock.
They then received an additional shipment of 11 books of the same novel.
To find the total number of this novel the bookstore now has, we add the initial number of books and the additional shipment:
88 + 11 = <<88 + 11 = 99>>99
### Answer: 99

Expected answer: 99

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Alex has a scooter collection. In his garage, he first kept 85 scooters. He soon sold 46 scooters to fellow enthusiasts. How many scooters does Alex now have in his collection?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Alex initially had 85 scooters in his garage.
2) He then sold 46 scooters to fellow enthusiasts.
3) To find the number of scooters Alex now has in his collection, we need to subtract the number of scooters he sold from the initial number of scooters he had.
4) 85 - 46 = 39

### Answer: 39

Expected answer: 39

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Alex has a scooter collection. In his garage, he first kept 85 scooters. He then sold 46 scooters to fellow enthusiasts. The next week, he bought another 59 from a scooter show. How many scooters does Alex have in his collection now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Alex initially had 85 scooters in his garage.
2) He then sold 46 scooters to fellow enthusiasts.
3) To find the number of scooters Alex had after selling 46, we subtract 46 from 85:
   85 - 46 = 39 scooters
4) The next week, he bought another 59 scooters from a scooter show.
5) To find the total number of scooters Alex has now, we add the 59 scooters he bought to the 39 scooters he had after the initial sale:
   39 + 59 = 98 scooters

### Answer: 98

Expected answer: 98

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous problem, Alex began with 85 scooters in his garage. But what if, initially, Alex had only 87 scooters instead of 85 in his collection? After selling the 46 scooters to the fellow enthusiasts, then how many scooters would Alex have remaining in his collection?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

1) Initially, Alex had 87 scooters in his collection.
2) He then sold 46 scooters to fellow enthusiasts.
3) To find the number of scooters Alex has remaining, we need to subtract the number of scooters he sold from the initial number of scooters he had.
4) 87 - 46 = 41

### Answer: 41

Expected answer: 41

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Consider this: a 2-digit number is 83. Another 2-digit number is 72. Subtract the smaller number from the larger one. Then, add 40 to the result. What is the final number that you get?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The first 2-digit number is 83.
2) The second 2-digit number is 72.
3) Subtract the smaller number from the larger one: 83 - 72 = 11.
4) Add 40 to the result: 11 + 40 = 51.

### Answer: 51

Expected answer: 51

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from our previous problem: you have calculated the resulting number after subtracting 72 from 83 and then adding 40 to the result. Now, add the result you got to the difference of 83 and 72. What number do you get now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's continue the problem:

1) The previous result was 51.
2) The difference between 83 and 72 is 83 - 72 = 11.
3) Now we add the previous result of 51 to the difference of 11:
   51 + 11 = 62

### Answer: 62

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's revisit our previous problem: instead of the original 2-digit number being 83, let's say it was 100 instead. We're still subtracting 72 from it. Then, we add 40 to the result, just like we did previously. What would be the resulting number now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

1) The first 2-digit number is 100.
2) The second 2-digit number is 72.
3) Subtract the smaller number from the larger one: 100 - 72 = 28.
4) Add 40 to the result: 28 + 40 = 68.

### Answer: 68

Expected answer: 68

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A field was occupied by 100 mice. After a week, 30 mice were caught by a cat. How many mice are left in the field?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The field was initially occupied by 100 mice.
After a week, 30 mice were caught by a cat.
The number of mice left in the field is the initial number of mice minus the number of mice caught by the cat.
100 - 30 = 70 mice.

### Answer: 70

Expected answer: 70

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Before the cat arrived, there were only 54 mice in the field, instead of the 100 as previously thought. How many mice would there have been after the cat caught 30 mice?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
1) Initially, there were 54 mice in the field.
2) The cat caught 30 mice.
3) To find the number of mice left, we take the initial number of mice (54) and subtract the number of mice caught by the cat (30).
4) 54 - 30 = 24 mice.

### Answer: 24

Expected answer: 24

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A store initially has 48 shirts in stock. After a day of sales, they find they have 26 shirts remaining. How many shirts did the store sell that day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The store initially had 48 shirts in stock.
After a day of sales, they had 26 shirts remaining.
To find the number of shirts sold, we need to subtract the remaining shirts from the initial stock.
48 shirts - 26 shirts = 22 shirts
Therefore, the store sold 22 shirts that day.

### Answer: 22

Expected answer: 22

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A stationery store has 23 HB pencils in stock. Later on, they receive a new shipment that includes 61 additional HB pencils. How many HB pencils does the store have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The stationery store initially had 23 HB pencils in stock.
They then received a new shipment of 61 additional HB pencils.
To find the total number of HB pencils the store has now, we add the initial 23 pencils to the 61 new pencils.
23 + 61 = <<23 + 61 = 84>>84
### Answer: 84

Expected answer: 84

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous problems, what if the store originally only received 30 additional HB pencils in the shipment, instead of 61. How many HB pencils would the store have in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: In the previous problem, the stationery store had 23 HB pencils in stock initially.
In this new scenario, the store received a shipment of 30 additional HB pencils, instead of 61.
To find the total number of HB pencils the store has now, we add the initial 23 pencils to the 30 new pencils.
23 + 30 = <<23 + 30 = 53>>53
### Answer: 53

Expected answer: 53

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Ben had 54 secret notes from his school friends. His little sister found them and took away 24 notes as a joke. How many notes does Ben have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Ben had 54 secret notes from his school friends
* His little sister took away 24 of those notes as a joke
* To find how many notes Ben has left, we need to subtract the number of notes taken away from the original number of notes

So, the calculation is:
* Original number of notes: 54
* Number of notes taken away: 24
* Number of notes left: 54 - 24 = <<54 - 24 = 30>>30

### Answer: 30

Expected answer: 30

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After realizing the little prank his sister pulled on him, Ben sets off to retrieve his notes. He manages to find and get back some of his notes. After checking his collection, he realises that he now has just as many notes as he initially did minus the ones he has remaining after his sister's prank. How many notes did Ben manage to retrieve from his sister?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:

* Originally, Ben had 54 secret notes
* His sister took away 24 of those notes
* After retrieving some of the notes, Ben now has the same number of notes as he initially had, minus the 30 notes he had left after his sister's prank

So, we can set up an equation:
* Let x = the number of notes Ben retrieved from his sister
* Originally Ben had 54 notes
* After his sister took 24 notes, he had 54 - 24 = 30 notes left
* Now Ben has the same number of notes as he initially had, which is 54
* So the equation is: 54 = 30 + x
* Solving for x, we get: x = 54 - 30 = <<54 - 30 = 24>>24

Therefore, Ben managed to retrieve 24 notes from his sister.

### Answer: 24

Expected answer: 24

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's rewind and imagine a different scenario. This time, Ben initially had 30 secret notes from his school friends instead of 54. His little sister still took away 24 notes as a joke. In this situation, how many notes does Ben have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this new scenario step-by-step:

* Ben initially had 30 secret notes from his school friends
* His little sister took away 24 of those notes as a joke

To find how many notes Ben has left, we need to subtract the number of notes taken away from the original number of notes:

* Original number of notes: 30
* Number of notes taken away: 24
* Number of notes left: 30 - 24 = <<30 - 24 = 6>>6

### Answer: 6

Expected answer: 6

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A toy store has 28 teddy bears in stock. Later in the day, they receive a new shipment with 10 more teddy bears. The following day, they receive yet another shipment with 49 more teddy bears. How many teddy bears do they have in store after receiving all the shipments?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. The toy store initially had 28 teddy bears in stock.
2. They then received a new shipment with 10 more teddy bears.
   * So now they have 28 + 10 = 38 teddy bears.
3. The following day, they received another shipment with 49 more teddy bears.
   * So now they have 38 + 49 = 87 teddy bears.

### Answer: 87

Expected answer: 87

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After counting all the teddy bears in stock, the toy store decides to donate 31 teddy bears to a local children's hospital. How many teddy bears do they have left in the store after the donation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
1. The toy store had 87 teddy bears in stock after receiving all the shipments.
2. They then decided to donate 31 teddy bears to the local children's hospital.
3. To find the number of teddy bears they have left in the store, we subtract the number donated from the total they had:
   * 87 - 31 = 56 teddy bears

### Answer: 56

Expected answer: 56

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a revision of the initial inventory, the toy store realizes there was a mistake and they originally only had 1 teddy bear in stock, not 28. But they did receive a shipment of 10 more teddy bears as mentioned before. Then, they received the shipment of 49 more teddy bears, as in the original scenario. How many teddy bears do they have in stock now after correcting the initial inventory error and receiving all the shipments?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's re-work this with the corrected initial inventory:

1. The toy store originally had 1 teddy bear in stock.
2. They then received a new shipment with 10 more teddy bears.
   * So now they have 1 + 10 = 11 teddy bears.
3. The following day, they received another shipment with 49 more teddy bears.
   * So now they have 11 + 49 = 60 teddy bears.

### Answer: 60

Expected answer: 60

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Rose had 12 dollars in her wallet. Her dad gave her 81 dollars for her birthday. How much money does Rose have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Rose had $12 in her wallet initially.
* Her dad gave her $81 for her birthday.
* To find the total amount of money Rose has now, we add the initial $12 and the $81 she received from her dad.
* $12 + $81 = $93

### Answer: $93

Expected answer: 93

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Rose spent 20 dollars on a new book. How much money does she have left after buying the book?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Alright, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Rose had $93 to start with
* She spent $20 on a new book
* To find how much money she has left, we subtract the $20 she spent from the $93 she had
* $93 - $20 = $73

### Answer: $73

Expected answer: 73

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A UFO sighting group reported 55 UFO sightings last month. This month, they reported 36 fewer sightings than last month. This month, they also received 81 additional reports from past sightings. How many total reported sightings does the group have this month?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Last month, the UFO sighting group reported 55 UFO sightings.
2. This month, they reported 36 fewer sightings than last month.
   * So, this month's sightings = 55 - 36 = 19 sightings.
3. This month, they also received 81 additional reports from past sightings.
   * So, the total reported sightings this month = 19 + 81 = 100 sightings.

### Answer: 100

Expected answer: 100

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the UFO sighting groups reported 36 fewer sightings this month as compared to the 55 sightings last month. But this time, they received 24 additional reports from past sightings. How many total reported sightings does the group have this month under these conditions?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Last month, the UFO sighting group reported 55 UFO sightings.
2. This month, they reported 36 fewer sightings than last month.
   * So, this month's sightings = 55 - 36 = 19 sightings.
3. This month, they also received 24 additional reports from past sightings.
   * So, the total reported sightings this month = 19 + 24 = 43 sightings.

### Answer: 43

Expected answer: 43

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The Happy Circus has 24 clowns. They quickly discover that they also need 35 people for the support staff, like popcorn vendors and ticket collectors. How many people in total does the Happy Circus employ?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The Happy Circus has 24 clowns
* They also need 35 people for the support staff (popcorn vendors, ticket collectors, etc.)
* To find the total number of people employed by the Happy Circus, we add the number of clowns and the number of support staff:
* 24 clowns + 35 support staff = <<24 + 35 = 59>>59 people in total

### Answer: 59

Expected answer: 59

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the Happy Circus employed a total of both clowns and support staff, they decided to let go of 40 employees for various reasons. How many people are now employed at the Happy Circus?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* Originally, the Happy Circus employed a total of 59 people (24 clowns + 35 support staff)
* They then let go of 40 employees
* To find the new number of employees, we take the original total and subtract the number of employees let go:
* 59 original employees - 40 employees let go = <<59 - 40 = 19>>19 employees now employed at the Happy Circus

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if the Happy Circus originally had 50 clowns instead of 24? How many total people would the Happy Circus have employed then, when they included the 35 support staff?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Originally, the Happy Circus had 50 clowns
* They also need 35 people for the support staff (popcorn vendors, ticket collectors, etc.)
* To find the total number of people employed by the Happy Circus, we add the number of clowns and the number of support staff:
* 50 clowns + 35 support staff = <<50 + 35 = 85>>85 people in total

### Answer: 85

Expected answer: 85

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Apple Inc. has 100 new smartphones in their main store. They sold 78 of them on the first day. If they received an additional shipment of 41 new smartphones the next day, how many new smartphones does the store have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Apple Inc. had 100 new smartphones in their main store.
2. They sold 78 of them on the first day.
3. They received an additional shipment of 41 new smartphones the next day.

To calculate the total number of new smartphones the store has now, we need to:
1. Subtract the 78 smartphones that were sold on the first day from the original 100 smartphones.
2. Add the 41 new smartphones that were received the next day.

So, the calculation is:
100 - 78 + 41 = <<100 - 78 + 41 = 63>>63 new smartphones.

### Answer: 63

Expected answer: 63

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Originally, after selling 78 of the 100 new smartphones, Apple Inc. received an additional shipment of 41 new smartphones. But what if instead, the additional shipment contained 61 new smartphones? How many new smartphones would the store have in that case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:

1. Originally, Apple Inc. had 100 new smartphones in their main store.
2. They sold 78 of them on the first day.
3. Instead of receiving 41 new smartphones, they received 61 new smartphones in the additional shipment.

To calculate the total number of new smartphones the store has now, we need to:
1. Subtract the 78 smartphones that were sold on the first day from the original 100 smartphones.
2. Add the 61 new smartphones that were received in the additional shipment.

So, the calculation is:
100 - 78 + 61 = <<100 - 78 + 61 = 83>>83 new smartphones.

### Answer: 83

Expected answer: 83

Correct? Yes