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Claude-3 Haiku on 2.NBT.B.7

Common Core Standard 2.NBT.B.7

This standard covers the following:

Add and subtract within 1000, using concrete models or drawings and strategies based on place value, properties of operations, and/or the relationship between addition and subtraction; relate the strategy to a written method. Understand that in adding or subtracting three-digit numbers, one adds or subtracts hundreds and hundreds, tens and tens, ones and ones; and sometimes it is necessary to compose or decompose tens or hundreds.

🔗 Problem

Problem: In one month, a fireplace company sold 278 traditional wood-burning fireplaces. In the same month, they also sold 305 more gas fireplaces than traditional ones. How many gas fireplaces did the company sell?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The company sold 278 traditional wood-burning fireplaces in one month
* They also sold 305 more gas fireplaces than traditional ones

To find the number of gas fireplaces sold, we need to add 305 to the number of traditional fireplaces sold:
* Number of gas fireplaces sold = 278 + 305 = 583

### Answer: 583

Expected answer: 583

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous month, the company counted all the fireplaces they sold, which included both traditional wood-burning and gas fireplaces. How many fireplaces in total did the company sell in one month?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's use the information from the previous problem to solve this one.

We know that:
* The company sold 278 traditional wood-burning fireplaces
* They also sold 583 gas fireplaces

To find the total number of fireplaces sold, we add these two numbers together:
* Total fireplaces sold = 278 (traditional) + 583 (gas) = 861

### Answer: 861

Expected answer: 861

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a revision of the previous scenario, let's say that the company actually only sold 68 more gas fireplaces than traditional ones, not 305. How many gas fireplaces did the company sell in this revised scenario?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this revised scenario step-by-step:
* The company sold 278 traditional wood-burning fireplaces in one month
* They sold 68 more gas fireplaces than traditional ones

To find the number of gas fireplaces sold, we need to add 68 to the number of traditional fireplaces sold:
* Number of gas fireplaces sold = 278 + 68 = 346

### Answer: 346

Expected answer: 346

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A photographer has a collection of 548 cameras. After visiting a photography exhibition, they bought 342 more cameras. How many cameras does the photographer have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The photographer originally had 548 cameras.
2) They then bought 342 more cameras.
3) To find the total number of cameras the photographer has now, we add the original 548 cameras to the 342 new cameras.
4) 548 + 342 = 890

### Answer: 890

Expected answer: 890

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: On planet Nebula, there are 792 alien creatures. But, 437 of them decide to move to another planet. How many alien creatures are left on planet Nebula?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There are 792 alien creatures on planet Nebula
* 437 of them decide to move to another planet
* To find the number of alien creatures left on planet Nebula, we need to subtract the number that moved away from the total number

So, the calculation is:
* Total alien creatures: 792
* Alien creatures that moved away: 437
* Alien creatures left on planet Nebula: 792 - 437 = 355

### Answer: 355

Expected answer: 355

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the group of 437 aliens move from planet Nebula, 291 more aliens from a neighboring galaxy decide to immigrate to Nebula. How many alien creatures are on planet Nebula now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's go through this step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 792 alien creatures on planet Nebula
* 437 of them decided to move to another planet, leaving 792 - 437 = 355 alien creatures on Nebula
* Then, 291 more aliens from a neighboring galaxy decided to immigrate to Nebula

To find the total number of alien creatures on Nebula now, we need to add the 291 new immigrants to the 355 that were left:
* 355 + 291 = 646

### Answer: 646

Expected answer: 646

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Originally, instead of having 792 alien creatures on planet Nebula, suppose there were actually 550 alien creatures. If 437 of these alien creatures move to another planet, how many alien creatures would be left on planet Nebula then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

* Originally, there were 550 alien creatures on planet Nebula
* 437 of these alien creatures moved to another planet
* To find the number of alien creatures left on planet Nebula, we need to subtract the number that moved away from the total number

So, the calculation is:
* Total alien creatures originally: 550
* Alien creatures that moved away: 437
* Alien creatures left on planet Nebula: 550 - 437 = 113

### Answer: 113

Expected answer: 113

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A space center launched 383 rockets last year. This year, they increased the number of rocket launches by 188. How many rockets did the space center launch this year?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Last year, the space center launched 383 rockets.
This year, they increased the number of rocket launches by 188.
To find the total number of rockets launched this year, we need to add the increase to the previous year's number of launches.
383 + 188 = 571
### Answer: 571

Expected answer: 571

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After launching 383 rockets last year and increasing the launches by 188 this year, the space center plans to reach a goal of 788 rocket launches next year. How many more rockets will they need to launch next year to reach this goal?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Last year, the space center launched 383 rockets.
This year, they increased the number of rocket launches by 188, so the total for this year is 383 + 188 = 571 rockets.
The goal for next year is 788 rocket launches.
To find how many more rockets they need to launch next year to reach the goal, we subtract the number of rockets launched this year from the goal:
788 - 571 = 217
### Answer: 217

Expected answer: 217

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: If, instead of increasing their rocket launches by 188, the space center had increased their rocket launches by a larger amount of 597 rockets after launching 383 rockets last year. How many rockets would they have launched this year?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Last year, the space center launched 383 rockets.
This year, they increased the number of rocket launches by 597.
To find the total number of rockets launched this year, we need to add the increase to the previous year's number of launches.
383 + 597 = 980
### Answer: 980

Expected answer: 980

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: During a bountiful year, a farmer was able to harvest 838 pounds of potatoes. However, 215 pounds proved to be inedible due to pests and rotting. How many pounds of good, edible potatoes did the farmer get from the harvest?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The farmer harvested 838 pounds of potatoes.
However, 215 pounds were inedible due to pests and rotting.
To find the amount of good, edible potatoes, we need to subtract the inedible potatoes from the total harvest.
838 pounds - 215 pounds = 623 pounds of good, edible potatoes.

### Answer: 623 pounds

Expected answer: 623

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After taking out the inedible potatoes, the farmer packed the edible potatoes into crates to be transported. However, 596 pounds of potatoes were lost due to an accident during transportation. How many pounds of good, edible potatoes did the farmer manage to transport safely?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The farmer harvested 838 pounds of potatoes.
2) 215 pounds were inedible due to pests and rotting.
3) So the amount of good, edible potatoes was 838 - 215 = 623 pounds.
4) However, 596 pounds of the edible potatoes were lost during transportation due to an accident.
5) To find the amount of good, edible potatoes that were transported safely, we need to subtract the 596 pounds lost from the 623 pounds of edible potatoes.
6) 623 pounds - 596 pounds = 27 pounds.

### Answer: 27 pounds

Expected answer: 27

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After considering the losses, the farmer realized he had initially miscalculated his edible potato harvest. In reality, he had only 307 pounds of edible potatoes, not 838, before the transportation accident. Considering the same loss of 215 pounds in the accident, how many pounds of good, edible potatoes did the farmer manage to transport safely?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

1. The farmer initially had 307 pounds of edible potatoes before the transportation accident.
2. During the accident, 215 pounds were lost due to pests and rotting.
3. To find the amount of good, edible potatoes the farmer managed to transport safely, we need to subtract the 215 pounds lost from the initial 307 pounds.

Calculation:
307 pounds - 215 pounds = 92 pounds

### Answer: 92 pounds

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the depths of an ocean, 250 rare coins were found in a concealed treasure chest. Divers further discovered an adjoining chest that contained 285 more coins than the first treasure chest. How many coins did the divers find in the second treasure chest?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The first treasure chest contained 250 rare coins.
* The second treasure chest contained 285 more coins than the first treasure chest.

To find the number of coins in the second treasure chest, we need to add 285 to the number of coins in the first treasure chest.

* Number of coins in the second treasure chest = 250 + 285 = 535

### Answer: 535

Expected answer: 535

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original discovery, the divers found 250 rare coins in the first treasure chest. They initially thought the second chest contained 285 more coins than the first. However, upon re-evaluation, they realized they had made an error, and the second chest actually contained only 262 more coins than the first. How many coins did the divers find in the second treasure chest after correcting their initial error?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The first treasure chest contained 250 rare coins.
* The initial estimate was that the second treasure chest contained 285 more coins than the first.
* However, upon re-evaluation, they realized the second chest actually contained 262 more coins than the first.

To find the number of coins in the second treasure chest, we need to add 262 to the number of coins in the first treasure chest.

* Number of coins in the second treasure chest = 250 + 262 = 512

### Answer: 512

Expected answer: 512

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A pirate ship has 441 doubloons in its treasure chest at the beginning of a raid. During the raid, the pirates spend 306 doubloons. How many doubloons are left in the treasure chest after the raid?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The pirate ship had 441 doubloons in its treasure chest at the beginning of the raid.
During the raid, the pirates spent 306 doubloons.
To find the number of doubloons left in the treasure chest after the raid, we need to subtract the amount spent from the initial amount.
441 doubloons - 306 doubloons = 135 doubloons.
### Answer: 135

Expected answer: 135

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the raid, the captain of the pirate ship spends 13 doubloons out of the remaining doubloons in the treasure chest to repair the ship. Now, how many doubloons are left in the treasure chest?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 135 doubloons left in the treasure chest after the raid.
The captain then spent 13 doubloons to repair the ship.
To find the number of doubloons left in the treasure chest, we need to subtract the amount spent from the remaining amount.
135 doubloons - 13 doubloons = 122 doubloons.
### Answer: 122

Expected answer: 122

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The pirate ship originally had 888 doubloons in its treasure chest instead of 441. If the pirates still spent 306 doubloons during the raid, then how many doubloons would be left in the treasure chest after the raid?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The pirate ship had 888 doubloons in its treasure chest at the beginning of the raid.
During the raid, the pirates spent 306 doubloons.
To find the number of doubloons left in the treasure chest after the raid, we need to subtract the amount spent from the initial amount.
888 doubloons - 306 doubloons = 582 doubloons.
### Answer: 582

Expected answer: 582

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A popular song has been played 54 times on Station A and 296 times on Station B. If you also consider the 354 spins it has received on Station C, how many total spins has the song received across all of them?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The song has been played 54 times on Station A
* The song has been played 296 times on Station B
* The song has been played 354 times on Station C

To find the total number of spins across all three stations, we add up the spins from each station:

Total spins = Spins on Station A + Spins on Station B + Spins on Station C
Total spins = 54 + 296 + 354
Total spins = 704

### Answer: 704

Expected answer: 704

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the situation of our popular song, let's consider another station. On Station D, the song gathers an additional 257 spins. Counting all four stations (Station A, Station B, Station C, and Station D) together, what is the new total number of spins that the song has received?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The song has been played 54 times on Station A
* The song has been played 296 times on Station B 
* The song has been played 354 times on Station C
* The song has been played 257 times on Station D

To find the new total number of spins across all four stations, we add up the spins from each station:

Total spins = Spins on Station A + Spins on Station B + Spins on Station C + Spins on Station D
Total spins = 54 + 296 + 354 + 257
Total spins = 961

### Answer: 961

Expected answer: 961

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's revisit our earlier scenario. Originally, the popular song had been played 84 times on Station A (not 54 as previously thought); it was still played 296 times on Station B, and 354 spins on Station C. Therefore, given the new count from Station A, what is the updated total number of spins that the song has received across Station A, Station B, and Station C?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's recalculate the total spins with the new information:

* The song has been played 84 times on Station A
* The song has been played 296 times on Station B 
* The song has been played 354 times on Station C

To find the total number of spins across all three stations, we add up the spins from each station:

Total spins = Spins on Station A + Spins on Station B + Spins on Station C
Total spins = 84 + 296 + 354
Total spins = 734

### Answer: 734

Expected answer: 734

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A base camp starts out with 308 helicopters. After a rescue operation, they have 293 helicopters left because several had to be sent to other locations. How many helicopters were sent out for the operation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The base camp started with 308 helicopters
* After the rescue operation, they had 293 helicopters left
* To find the number of helicopters sent out for the operation, we need to subtract the number of helicopters left from the original number of helicopters

308 helicopters - 293 helicopters = 15 helicopters

Therefore, 15 helicopters were sent out for the rescue operation.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if there were originally 956 helicopters at the camp, and still after a mission, 293 are removed from that number for various operations, then how many helicopters are left at the base camp?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 956 helicopters at the base camp
* After a mission, 293 helicopters were removed
* To find the number of helicopters left at the base camp, we need to subtract the number of helicopters removed from the original number

956 helicopters - 293 helicopters = 663 helicopters

Therefore, there are 663 helicopters left at the base camp.

### Answer: 663

Expected answer: 663

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: You start with 792 milliliters of red paint. After painting a few items, you have 676 milliliters less in the container than at the beginning. How many milliliters of red paint are left in the paint container?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* You started with 792 milliliters of red paint
* After painting, you have 676 milliliters less in the container than at the beginning

To find the amount of red paint left in the container, we need to subtract the amount used from the initial amount:
* Initial amount: 792 milliliters
* Amount used: 676 milliliters
* Amount left: 792 - 676 = 116 milliliters

### Answer: 116 milliliters

Expected answer: 116

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After using some of your red paint, you decide you want to mix it with some blue paint. You have 831 milliliters of blue paint, but you decide to use the same amount of blue paint as the amount of red paint left after painting the few items earlier. How much blue paint will you have left after the mixture?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* You had 116 milliliters of red paint left after painting the items earlier
* You decided to use the same amount of blue paint as the amount of red paint left
* You had 831 milliliters of blue paint to start with

To find the amount of blue paint left after the mixture, we need to subtract the amount of blue paint used from the initial amount:
* Initial amount of blue paint: 831 milliliters
* Amount of blue paint used: 116 milliliters
* Amount of blue paint left: 831 - 116 = 715 milliliters

### Answer: 715 milliliters

Expected answer: 715

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After using your red and blue paints for your project, you have a new project involving only red paint. Now, you start with the same 792 milliliters of red paint, but this time, you only use 4 milliliters of it for a minor touch-up on a small piece. How many milliliters of red paint are left in the paint container now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* You started with 792 milliliters of red paint
* This time, you only used 4 milliliters of it for a minor touch-up

To find the amount of red paint left in the container, we need to subtract the amount used from the initial amount:
* Initial amount: 792 milliliters
* Amount used: 4 milliliters
* Amount left: 792 - 4 = 788 milliliters

### Answer: 788 milliliters

Expected answer: 788

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a particular rainforest, there are 108 Golden monkeys living in a given area. Nearby, in another area of the same forest, there are 848 more Golden monkeys. How many Golden monkeys are there in both areas of the forest combined?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* In the first area of the rainforest, there are 108 Golden monkeys
* In the second area of the rainforest, there are 848 more Golden monkeys than the first area
* To find the total number of Golden monkeys in both areas, we need to add the number of monkeys in the first area to the number of monkeys in the second area

So, the calculation is:
* Number of monkeys in first area: 108
* Number of monkeys in second area: 108 + 848 = 956
* Total number of monkeys in both areas: 108 + 956 = 1,064

### Answer: 1,064

Expected answer: 956

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a kite festival, Jonathan flew 307 kites. Isabella, another participant, flew 643 kites plus an additional number of kites equal to the number Jonathan flew. How many kites in total did Isabella fly in the festival?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Jonathan flew 307 kites
2) Isabella flew 643 kites plus an additional number of kites equal to the number Jonathan flew
3) To find the additional number of kites Isabella flew, we take the number Jonathan flew, which is 307
4) So Isabella flew 643 + 307 = 950 kites in total

### Answer: 950

Expected answer: 950

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the kite festival, Isabella realized she needed to return some of the kites she borrowed. She decided to return the same number of kites that Jonathan had flown. After returning the kites, how many did Isabella have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's go through this step-by-step:
1) Isabella flew 950 kites in total at the kite festival
2) She decided to return the same number of kites that Jonathan had flown, which was 307 kites
3) To find how many kites Isabella had left, we take the total number of kites she flew (950) and subtract the number of kites she returned (307)
4) 950 - 307 = 643 kites

### Answer: 643

Expected answer: 643

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reflecting on the previous kite festival, Isabella realized that she mistakenly counted the number of kites she flew. Instead of 643 kites, she had actually flown 604 kites in addition to the same number that Jonathan had flown. With this corrected count, how many kites in total did Isabella fly in the festival?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

1) Jonathan flew 307 kites
2) Isabella originally thought she flew 643 kites, but she actually flew 604 kites
3) In addition to the 604 kites, Isabella also flew the same number of kites as Jonathan, which is 307
4) So the total number of kites Isabella flew is 604 + 307 = 911

### Answer: 911

Expected answer: 911

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There are 379 beats in a drum solo. At one point, the drummer misses 39 beats due to a distraction. How many beats did the drummer actually play in the solo?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The drum solo has 379 beats in total.
2) The drummer missed 39 beats due to a distraction.
3) To find the number of beats the drummer actually played, we need to subtract the missed beats from the total beats.
4) 379 - 39 = 340

### Answer: 340

Expected answer: 340

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: During the drummer's next performance, he manages to play a total of 906 beats. If he played exactly the same solo as the last time when he missed 39 beats from a total of 379, how many additional beats did he add to his performance this time?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

1) In the previous performance, the total beats was 379, and the drummer missed 39 beats.
2) So the number of beats the drummer actually played in the previous performance was 379 - 39 = 340 beats.
3) In the next performance, the drummer played a total of 906 beats.
4) To find the additional beats the drummer added, we need to subtract the number of beats he played in the previous performance (340) from the total beats in the next performance (906).
5) 906 - 340 = 566

### Answer: 566

Expected answer: 566

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a different performance, the drummer plans on performing a new solo with only 185 beats. If he still misses the same 39 beats due to a recurring distraction, how many beats does he successfully play in the new drum solo?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
1) The new drum solo has 185 beats in total.
2) The drummer still misses 39 beats due to a distraction.
3) To find the number of beats the drummer successfully plays, we need to subtract the missed beats from the total beats.
4) 185 - 39 = 146

### Answer: 146

Expected answer: 146

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A popular skateboard store sold 360 skateboards last month. This month, they improved their sale and sold 57 skateboards more than last month. How many skateboards did the store sell this month?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Last month, the store sold 360 skateboards
* This month, they sold 57 skateboards more than last month

To find the total number of skateboards sold this month, we need to add the 57 additional skateboards to the 360 skateboards sold last month.

360 skateboards (last month) + 57 additional skateboards = <<360 + 57 = 417>> skateboards sold this month.

### Answer: 417

Expected answer: 417

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The skateboard store had originally stocked 685 skateboards this month. If they sold 57 more skateboards than the 360 they sold last month, how many skateboards will the store have in stock after this month's sales?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The store originally stocked 685 skateboards this month
* They sold 57 more skateboards than the 360 they sold last month
* To find the number of skateboards sold this month:
  - Last month they sold 360 skateboards
  - This month they sold 57 more, so 360 + 57 = 417 skateboards sold this month

Now, to find the number of skateboards left in stock after this month's sales, we take the original 685 skateboards and subtract the 417 skateboards sold:

* 685 skateboards (original stock) - 417 skateboards (sold this month) = <<685 - 417 = 268>> skateboards left in stock

### Answer: 268

Expected answer: 268

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: John had 671 dollars in his wallet in the morning, but by the evening he spent some money and was left with 431 dollars less than what he had in the morning. How much money did John have left in his wallet in the evening?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* John had $671 in his wallet in the morning
* By the evening, he had $431 less than what he had in the morning

To find out how much money John had left in his wallet in the evening, we need to subtract the $431 he spent from the $671 he had in the morning.

$671 - $431 = $240

### Answer: $240

Expected answer: 240

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: John had 671 dollars in his wallet in the morning, but by the evening he spent some money and was left with 431 dollars less than what he had in the morning. The following day, he goes to the bank and deposits another 709 dollars into his wallet. How much money does John have in his wallet after the deposit?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* John had $671 in his wallet in the morning
* By the evening, he had $431 less than what he had in the morning
* To find out how much he had left in the evening:
   - $671 - $431 = $240
* The next day, he deposits $709 into his wallet

To find the total amount of money John has in his wallet after the deposit, we need to add the $709 he deposited to the $240 he had left from the previous day.

$240 + $709 = $949

### Answer: $949

Expected answer: 949

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario, John had 671 dollars in his wallet in the morning and by the evening he spent some money and was left with 431 dollars less. But what if instead, John had decided to spend less and only spent 411 dollars? How much money would John have left in his wallet in the evening in this revised scenario?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

* John had $671 in his wallet in the morning
* In this revised scenario, he spent $411
* To find out how much money he had left in the evening, we subtract the amount he spent ($411) from the original amount he had ($671)

$671 - $411 = $260

### Answer: $260

Expected answer: 260

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A company produces 306 red toy cars and 259 blue toy cars in a single batch. They then produce an additional 25 special edition golden cars. How many toy cars in total did the company produce?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The company produced 306 red toy cars.
2) The company produced 259 blue toy cars.
3) The company then produced an additional 25 special edition golden cars.

To find the total number of toy cars produced, we add up the red, blue, and golden cars:
306 red cars + 259 blue cars + 25 golden cars = 590 toy cars

### Answer: 590

Expected answer: 590

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following production, the company decides to manufacture an additional 22 limited edition silver toy cars. Now, how many toy cars in total did the company produce?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's add the additional 22 limited edition silver toy cars to the previous total:

Total toy cars produced initially:
306 red cars + 259 blue cars + 25 golden cars = 590 toy cars

Additional 22 limited edition silver toy cars:
590 toy cars + 22 silver cars = 612 toy cars

### Answer: 612

Expected answer: 612

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the company actually produced 371 blue toy cars instead of the 259 initially reported. Along with the 306 red toy cars and the special edition golden cars, how many toy cars in total did the company produce now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's update the information:
1) The company produced 306 red toy cars.
2) The company produced 371 blue toy cars (updated from the previous 259).
3) The company then produced an additional 25 special edition golden cars.

To find the total number of toy cars produced, we add up the red, blue, and golden cars:
306 red cars + 371 blue cars + 25 golden cars = 702 toy cars

### Answer: 702

Expected answer: 702

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A camera store has 528 cameras in stock. After a holiday sale, they have 414 cameras less in their inventory. How many cameras are left in the store after the sale?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The camera store originally had 528 cameras in stock.
* After the holiday sale, they had 414 cameras less in their inventory.
* To find the number of cameras left in the store, we need to subtract the number of cameras sold from the original number of cameras.
* 528 cameras - 414 cameras sold = 114 cameras left.

### Answer: 114

Expected answer: 114

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the initial problem, suppose instead the camera store initially had 528 cameras in stock, but after a holiday sale, they sold 491 cameras. How many cameras would be left in the store after this sale?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The camera store originally had 528 cameras in stock.
* After the holiday sale, they sold 491 cameras.
* To find the number of cameras left in the store, we need to subtract the number of cameras sold from the original number of cameras.
* 528 cameras - 491 cameras sold = 37 cameras left.

### Answer: 37

Expected answer: 37

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: During a large public event, 341 police officers were deployed in the morning to maintain peace. In the afternoon, additional 30 police officers were dispatched to the event. How many police officers were deployed in total throughout the event day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the morning, 341 police officers were deployed.
In the afternoon, an additional 30 police officers were dispatched.
To find the total number of police officers deployed throughout the event day, we need to add the morning and afternoon deployments.

Total police officers deployed = 341 + 30 = 371

### Answer: 371

Expected answer: 371

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the large public event, another unexpected event occurred in the city. An additional 440 officers were quickly sent to manage the situation. How many police officers were deployed for both events in total throughout the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
For the first event:
* 341 police officers were deployed in the morning
* 30 additional police officers were dispatched in the afternoon
* Total police officers deployed for the first event = 341 + 30 = 371

For the second unexpected event:
* 440 additional police officers were quickly sent to manage the situation

To find the total number of police officers deployed for both events throughout the day, we need to add the deployments for the two events:

Total police officers deployed = 371 + 440 = 811

### Answer: 811

Expected answer: 811

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the large public event, another unexpected event occurred in the city. Instead of the original 440 officers, 321 officers were quickly sent to manage the situation. With the 341 officers from the morning event, how many police officers were deployed for both events in total throughout the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
For the first event in the morning, 341 police officers were deployed.
For the unexpected event in the city, 321 police officers were sent.
To find the total number of police officers deployed for both events, we need to add the number of officers from each event.

Total police officers deployed = 341 + 321 = 662

### Answer: 662

Expected answer: 662

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A truck company has 838 light-duty trucks in their fleet. They recently purchased an additional 121 trucks for their operation. How many trucks does the company now have in total in their fleet?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The truck company originally had 838 light-duty trucks in their fleet.
* They recently purchased an additional 121 trucks.
* To find the total number of trucks in their fleet now, we need to add the original 838 trucks to the 121 new trucks.

838 + 121 = <<838 + 121 = 959>>959

### Answer: 959

Expected answer: 959

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The truck company decided to sell some of its older trucks. After selling 867 trucks from their fleet, how many trucks does the company now have left in their fleet?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:
* The truck company originally had 959 trucks in their fleet (from the previous problem)
* They then sold 867 trucks from their fleet

To find the number of trucks they have left, we need to subtract the 867 trucks they sold from the original 959 trucks:

959 - 867 = <<959 - 867 = 92>>92

### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that initially the truck company had 478 light-duty trucks instead of 838 in their fleet. After their recent purchase of an additional 121 trucks, how many trucks would the company now have in total in their fleet?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* The truck company originally had 478 light-duty trucks in their fleet.
* They recently purchased an additional 121 trucks.
* To find the total number of trucks in their fleet now, we need to add the original 478 trucks to the 121 new trucks.

478 + 121 = <<478 + 121 = 599>>599

### Answer: 599

Expected answer: 599

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At a summer camp, the staff collected 328 pieces of dry wood during the day. Later on, they found an additional 540 pieces. How many pieces of wood did the staff collect in total for tonight's campfire?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The staff collected 328 pieces of dry wood during the day.
2) They later found an additional 540 pieces.
3) To find the total number of pieces of wood collected, we add the two amounts together:
   328 + 540 = 868
### Answer: 868

Expected answer: 868

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario at the summer camp, what if the staff only managed to collect 328 pieces of dry wood during the day and later found an additional 479 pieces instead of 540? How many pieces of wood would they have collected for the campfire in this case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) The staff collected 328 pieces of dry wood during the day.
2) They later found an additional 479 pieces.
3) To find the total number of pieces of wood collected, we add the two amounts together:
   328 + 479 = 807
### Answer: 807

Expected answer: 807

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer harvested 973 potatoes from his field. However, 504 of them were deemed unfit for sale. How many potatoes were fit for sale?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The farmer harvested 973 potatoes from his field
* 504 of those potatoes were deemed unfit for sale
* To find the number of potatoes that were fit for sale, we need to subtract the number of unfit potatoes from the total number of potatoes harvested

973 (total potatoes harvested) - 504 (unfit potatoes) = 469 (potatoes fit for sale)

### Answer: 469

Expected answer: 469

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After sorting out the unfit potatoes, the farmer sold 297 of the good potatoes to a local restaurant. How many potatoes does he have left now to sell?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:
* The farmer had 469 potatoes that were fit for sale
* He then sold 297 of those potatoes to a local restaurant
* To find how many potatoes he has left, we need to subtract the number of potatoes he sold from the total number of fit potatoes

469 (fit potatoes) - 297 (potatoes sold) = 172 (potatoes left)

### Answer: 172

Expected answer: 172

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Planet Xoox had 558 known alien species. However, a recent error correction in the database removed 66 incorrectly categorized species from the total count. Simultaneously, explorers from Planet Xoox discovered an uncharted planet with 120 new species. After these changes, what is the updated total number of known alien species?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Planet Xoox had 558 known alien species.
2. 66 incorrectly categorized species were removed from the total count.
   * So the new total is 558 - 66 = 492 known alien species.
3. Explorers discovered an uncharted planet with 120 new species.
   * So the updated total number of known alien species is 492 + 120 = 612.

### Answer: 612

Expected answer: 612

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: On Planet Xoox, after the correction in the database and the new species discovered from the uncharted planet, the updated total number of known alien species was calculated. However, further review found that 153 species were duplicated in the count. After removing the duplicates, what is the final total number of unique alien species?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's go through this step-by-step:
1. The updated total number of known alien species was 612 (from the previous problem).
2. Further review found that 153 species were duplicated in the count.
3. To find the final total number of unique alien species, we need to subtract the 153 duplicates from the 612 total:
   * 612 - 153 = 459

### Answer: 459

Expected answer: 459

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the Planet Xoox database, it was originally thought there were 558 known alien species. After a correction that removed 66 species and added 120 from a newly discovered planet, an updated count was calculated. But what if the starting number was wrong and there were actually 567 known alien species originally, not 558? After a similar correction of removing 66 and adding 120, what would be the new total number of known alien species then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's rework this with the updated starting number of 567 known alien species originally.

1. The original number of known alien species was 567.
2. 66 incorrectly categorized species were removed from the total count.
   * So the new total is 567 - 66 = 501 known alien species.
3. Explorers discovered an uncharted planet with 120 new species.
   * So the updated total number of known alien species is 501 + 120 = 621.

### Answer: 621

Expected answer: 621

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Jackson is a painter who uses 336 milliliters of paint to create a sky scenery. For his next piece, he uses 747 milliliters of paint, which is more than he used for the sky scenery. How many more milliliters of paint did Jackson use for his next painting?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Jackson used 336 milliliters of paint to create a sky scenery
* For his next piece, he used 747 milliliters of paint
* We need to find how many more milliliters of paint he used for the next painting compared to the sky scenery

To calculate this, we take the amount of paint used for the next painting (747 ml) and subtract the amount used for the sky scenery (336 ml):
* 747 ml - 336 ml = 411 ml

Therefore, Jackson used 411 more milliliters of paint for his next painting compared to the sky scenery.

### Answer: 411

Expected answer: 411

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the third painting, Jackson only has 361 milliliters of paint left. He subtracts the amount of paint he used for the first painting from his remaining resources. How many milliliters of paint does he have left after this calculation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Jackson had 361 milliliters of paint left after the third painting
* He subtracts the amount of paint he used for the first painting (336 ml) from the remaining 361 ml

To calculate the amount of paint he has left after this calculation, we take the remaining 361 ml and subtract the 336 ml used for the first painting:
* 361 ml - 336 ml = 25 ml

Therefore, Jackson has 25 milliliters of paint left after subtracting the amount used for the first painting from his remaining resources.

### Answer: 25

Expected answer: 25

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Your new card deck begins with 346 cards. After a few games, you realize you have lost 47 cards. How many cards are left in your deck now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* You started with 346 cards in your deck
* You lost 47 cards
* To find the number of cards left in your deck, we subtract the number of lost cards from the initial number of cards:
* 346 - 47 = 299

### Answer: 299

Expected answer: 299

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous scenario, your new card deck begins with 346 cards. After a few games, you realize you have lost 47 cards. Then, you buy another deck of cards that contains 580 cards and add them to your existing deck. How many cards do you have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's go through this step-by-step:
* You started with 346 cards in your deck
* You lost 47 cards, so you had 346 - 47 = 299 cards left
* You then bought a new deck with 580 cards
* To find the total number of cards you have now, we add the remaining cards from the original deck to the new deck:
* 299 + 580 = 879

### Answer: 879

Expected answer: 879

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous scenario, let's suppose you started with a larger deck of cards. Instead of 346 cards, you actually had 747 cards to begin with. If you still lost the same number of cards, 47, how many cards would be left in your deck now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:
* You started with 747 cards in your deck
* You lost 47 cards
* To find the number of cards left in your deck, we subtract the number of lost cards from the initial number of cards:
* 747 - 47 = 700

### Answer: 700

Expected answer: 700

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a public sandbox playground, there are 336 pounds of sand. One morning, a maintenance crew added 268 pounds of sand. What is the total weight of the sand in the sandbox now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 336 pounds of sand in the sandbox.
* The maintenance crew added 268 pounds of sand.
* To find the total weight of the sand in the sandbox now, we need to add the initial amount of sand and the amount of sand added.

So, the total weight of the sand in the sandbox now is:
336 pounds + 268 pounds = 604 pounds

### Answer: 604 pounds

Expected answer: 604

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the afternoon of the same day, the playground management decided to remove an equal amount of sand as was initially present before the morning's addition. How much sand is left in the public sandbox playground now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 336 pounds of sand in the sandbox.
* The maintenance crew added 268 pounds of sand in the morning.
* So the total weight of the sand in the sandbox was 336 + 268 = 604 pounds.
* In the afternoon, the playground management decided to remove an equal amount of sand as was initially present before the morning's addition.
* That means they removed 336 pounds of sand.

So, the amount of sand left in the public sandbox playground now is:
604 pounds - 336 pounds = 268 pounds

### Answer: 268 pounds

Expected answer: 268

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that, instead of originally having 336 pounds of sand, the sandbox had 337 pounds of sand. How much total sand would be in the sandbox after the same 268 pounds were added?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

* Originally, the sandbox had 337 pounds of sand.
* The maintenance crew added 268 pounds of sand.
* To find the total weight of the sand in the sandbox now, we need to add the initial amount of sand and the amount of sand added.

So, the total weight of the sand in the sandbox now is:
337 pounds + 268 pounds = 605 pounds

### Answer: 605 pounds

Expected answer: 605

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a butterfly sanctuary, there are 961 Monarch butterflies. However, 732 of them join a swarm and leave the sanctuary. After this, 453 other species of butterflies arrive. How many butterflies are now in the sanctuary?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Initially, there were 961 Monarch butterflies in the sanctuary.
2. 732 Monarch butterflies joined a swarm and left the sanctuary.
3. This means the number of Monarch butterflies remaining in the sanctuary is 961 - 732 = 229.
4. After this, 453 other species of butterflies arrived at the sanctuary.
5. So the total number of butterflies now in the sanctuary is 229 (Monarch) + 453 (other species) = 682.

### Answer: 682

Expected answer: 682

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous situation in the butterfly sanctuary, another 144 rare species of butterflies are discovered and are added to the existing count. Now, how many butterflies are in the sanctuary?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's continue the calculation from the previous situation:

1. Initially, there were 682 butterflies in the sanctuary (229 Monarch + 453 other species).
2. An additional 144 rare species of butterflies were discovered and added to the existing count.
3. So the new total number of butterflies in the sanctuary is 682 + 144 = 826.

### Answer: 826

Expected answer: 826

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Keeping the butterflies' sanctuary scenario in mind, let's consider a different situation. Suppose initially there were 961 Monarch butterflies, but this time only 732 left the sanctuary. Then, 197 other species of butterflies arrive. From this, how many butterflies are now in the sanctuary?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

1. Initially, there were 961 Monarch butterflies in the sanctuary.
2. 732 Monarch butterflies left the sanctuary.
3. This means the number of Monarch butterflies remaining in the sanctuary is 961 - 732 = 229.
4. After this, 197 other species of butterflies arrived at the sanctuary.
5. So the total number of butterflies now in the sanctuary is 229 (Monarch) + 197 (other species) = 426.

### Answer: 426

Expected answer: 426

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A music store has 823 guitars in stock. 700 of these guitars are electric, the rest are acoustic. How many acoustic guitars does the music store have in stock?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The music store has 823 guitars in stock
* 700 of these guitars are electric
* The remaining guitars are acoustic

To find the number of acoustic guitars, we need to subtract the number of electric guitars from the total number of guitars:
* Total guitars: 823
* Electric guitars: 700
* Acoustic guitars: 823 - 700 = 123

Therefore, the music store has 123 acoustic guitars in stock.

### Answer: 123

Expected answer: 123

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: A music store originally had 823 guitars in stock. Instead of the 700 electric guitars from the previous scenario, let's consider they started with only 26 electric guitars. How many acoustic guitars would the store have had in this situation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

* The music store originally had 823 guitars in stock
* Out of those 823 guitars, 26 were electric
* The remaining guitars must be acoustic

To find the number of acoustic guitars, we need to subtract the number of electric guitars from the total number of guitars:

* Total guitars: 823
* Electric guitars: 26
* Acoustic guitars: 823 - 26 = 797

Therefore, the music store would have had 797 acoustic guitars in this situation.

### Answer: 797

Expected answer: 797

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the morning, a chicken farm owner counts 293 hens in the coop. In the afternoon, an additional 499 hens are added from the latest batch. After selling 259 hens in the evening, how many hens are left in the coop?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. In the morning, the chicken farm owner counted 293 hens in the coop.
2. In the afternoon, an additional 499 hens were added from the latest batch.
   * So the total number of hens in the coop after the afternoon addition is 293 + 499 = 792 hens.
3. In the evening, 259 hens were sold.
   * So the number of hens left in the coop is 792 - 259 = 533 hens.

### Answer: 533

Expected answer: 533

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the initial count, additions, and selling of the hens, the chicken farm owner then decides to donate 99 hens to a local charity. After the donation, how many hens are left in the coop?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's continue the problem step-by-step:

1. In the morning, the chicken farm owner counted 293 hens in the coop.
2. In the afternoon, an additional 499 hens were added from the latest batch, making the total 293 + 499 = 792 hens.
3. In the evening, 259 hens were sold, leaving 792 - 259 = 533 hens.
4. After the donation of 99 hens to a local charity, the number of hens left in the coop is 533 - 99 = 434 hens.

### Answer: 434

Expected answer: 434

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of adding 499 hens in the afternoon, the chicken farm owner only added 365 hens. After selling 259 hens in the evening, how many hens would then be left in the coop?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
1. In the morning, the chicken farm owner counted 293 hens in the coop.
2. In the afternoon, 365 additional hens were added from the latest batch.
   * So the total number of hens in the coop after the afternoon addition is 293 + 365 = 658 hens.
3. In the evening, 259 hens were sold.
   * So the number of hens left in the coop is 658 - 259 = 399 hens.

### Answer: 399

Expected answer: 399

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a small flower shop, there were 205 roses at the start of the day. By the end of the day, they sold 197 roses. How many roses were left in the shop at the end of the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
At the start of the day, there were 205 roses in the flower shop.
By the end of the day, they sold 197 roses.
To find the number of roses left in the shop at the end of the day, we need to subtract the number of roses sold from the initial number of roses.
205 roses - 197 roses sold = <<205 - 197 = 8>>8 roses left in the shop at the end of the day.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that initially, the flower shop owner had brought 323 roses instead of 205. After selling 197 roses, how many roses would be left in the shop?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, the flower shop owner had 323 roses.
They sold 197 roses.
To find the number of roses left in the shop, we need to subtract the number of roses sold from the initial number of roses.
323 roses - 197 roses sold = <<323 - 197 = 126>>126 roses left in the shop.

### Answer: 126

Expected answer: 126

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A pizzeria made 384 pizzas on a busy weekend. However, they realized that 212 of those pizzas had been mistakenly made as vegetarian pizzas instead of pepperoni pizzas. How many of the pizzas made were actually pepperoni pizzas?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The pizzeria made 384 pizzas in total.
Out of those 384 pizzas, 212 were mistakenly made as vegetarian pizzas instead of pepperoni pizzas.
To find the number of pepperoni pizzas, we need to subtract the number of vegetarian pizzas from the total number of pizzas made.
384 - 212 = <<384 - 212 = 172>>172 pepperoni pizzas.

### Answer: 172

Expected answer: 172

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: A pizzeria made 384 pizzas on a busy weekend. However, they realized that 212 of those pizzas had been mistakenly made as vegetarian pizzas instead of pepperoni pizzas. After a recount, they discover that they had, unfortunately, burnt 11 of the pepperoni pizzas and had to throw them away. How many unburned pepperoni pizzas did they end up with?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The pizzeria made 384 pizzas in total.
2) 212 of those pizzas were mistakenly made as vegetarian pizzas instead of pepperoni pizzas.
3) So the number of pepperoni pizzas initially made was 384 - 212 = 172 pizzas.
4) However, they discovered that 11 of the pepperoni pizzas were burnt and had to be thrown away.
5) So the number of unburned pepperoni pizzas they ended up with is 172 - 11 = 161 pizzas.

### Answer: 161

Expected answer: 161

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: A pizzeria made 384 pizzas on a busy weekend. However, upon reconsideration, they realized that they had mistakenly counted and that only 102 of those pizzas were actually made as vegetarian pizzas instead of pepperoni pizzas. How many of the pizzas made were actually pepperoni pizzas now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The pizzeria made 384 pizzas in total
* They initially thought 212 of those were mistakenly made as vegetarian pizzas
* But upon reconsideration, they realized only 102 were actually made as vegetarian pizzas
* To find the number of pepperoni pizzas, we need to subtract the number of vegetarian pizzas from the total number of pizzas made
* 384 - 102 = <<384 - 102 = 282>>282 pepperoni pizzas

### Answer: 282

Expected answer: 282

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a fantasy world, there are 271 red dragons. If you add to this the number of 404 green dragons, how many dragons are in the world all together?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) There are 271 red dragons in the fantasy world.
2) There are 404 green dragons in the fantasy world.
3) To find the total number of dragons, we add the red dragons and the green dragons:
271 red dragons + 404 green dragons = 675 total dragons.

### Answer: 675

Expected answer: 675

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In this fantasy world with 271 red dragons and 404 green dragons, there are also 282 blue dragons. If we add up the red, green, and blue dragons, how many dragons are there in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) There are 271 red dragons
2) There are 404 green dragons 
3) There are 282 blue dragons
4) To find the total number of dragons, we add up the red, green, and blue dragons:
   271 red dragons + 404 green dragons + 282 blue dragons = 957 total dragons

### Answer: 957

Expected answer: 957

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Sally and Ben have a friendly snowball fight. Sally makes 391 snowballs while Ben makes 422. How many total snowballs do they make for their playful fight?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Sally made 391 snowballs
* Ben made 422 snowballs
* To find the total number of snowballs, we add the number of snowballs made by Sally and Ben:
* 391 + 422 = 813

### Answer: 813

Expected answer: 813

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A costume design firm has 171 skirts in stock. They produce 67 more skirts in preparation for a big upcoming stage production. How many skirts do they have in total after production?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The costume design firm has 171 skirts in stock initially.
2) They produce 67 more skirts in preparation for the upcoming stage production.
3) To find the total number of skirts they have after production, we add the initial 171 skirts to the 67 new skirts produced.
4) 171 + 67 = 238 skirts in total.

### Answer: 238

Expected answer: 238

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the produced skirts were added, the costume design firm realizes that they need to have a total of 663 skirts available for the upcoming production. How many more skirts does the firm need to make to have the necessary number of skirts for the production?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

1) The costume design firm initially had 171 skirts in stock.
2) They produced 67 more skirts, so now they have 171 + 67 = 238 skirts.
3) However, they need a total of 663 skirts for the upcoming production.
4) To find how many more skirts they need to make, we take the total needed (663) and subtract the number they currently have (238).
5) 663 - 238 = 425 more skirts needed.

### Answer: 425

Expected answer: 425

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Instead of the 171 skirts initially in stock, let's say the costume design firm initially had 390 skirts. They still produced 67 more skirts. How many skirts would they have in total after this production?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) The costume design firm initially had 390 skirts in stock.
2) They produced 67 more skirts in preparation for the upcoming stage production.
3) To find the total number of skirts they have after production, we add the initial 390 skirts to the 67 new skirts produced.
4) 390 + 67 = 457 skirts in total.

### Answer: 457

Expected answer: 457

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The sun radiates 752 quintillion joules of energy every second. During night time on the earth, approximately 243 quintillion joules of this energy isn't received. How much energy from the sun is received on earth during nighttime every second?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The sun radiates 752 quintillion joules of energy every second.
* During nighttime on Earth, approximately 243 quintillion joules of this energy isn't received.

To find the amount of energy from the sun that is received on Earth during nighttime every second, we need to subtract the amount of energy that isn't received from the total energy radiated by the sun.

Total energy radiated by the sun per second: 752 quintillion joules
Energy not received during nighttime: 243 quintillion joules

Energy received on Earth during nighttime per second:
752 quintillion joules - 243 quintillion joules = 509 quintillion joules

### Answer: 509 quintillion joules

Expected answer: 509

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, if our planet needs at least 730 quintillion joules of energy from the sun every second to maintain its current temperature, how much energy is the earth lacking every second during nighttime?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's continue the calculation from the previous problem.

We know that:
* The sun radiates 752 quintillion joules of energy every second
* During nighttime on Earth, 243 quintillion joules of this energy isn't received
* The planet needs at least 730 quintillion joules of energy from the sun every second to maintain its current temperature

To find the amount of energy the Earth is lacking every second during nighttime, we need to subtract the amount of energy received during nighttime from the minimum energy required to maintain the current temperature.

Energy received during nighttime: 509 quintillion joules (from the previous problem)
Minimum energy required: 730 quintillion joules

Energy lacking during nighttime:
730 quintillion joules - 509 quintillion joules = 221 quintillion joules

### Answer: 221 quintillion joules

Expected answer: 221

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from our earlier discussion, now consider that during nighttime on earth, approximately 346 quintillion joules of energy from the sun isn't received instead of 243 quintillion joules. With this new number, how much energy from the sun is received on earth during the nighttime every second?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

* The sun radiates 752 quintillion joules of energy every second.
* During nighttime on Earth, approximately 346 quintillion joules of this energy isn't received.

To find the amount of energy from the sun that is received on Earth during nighttime every second, we need to subtract the amount of energy that isn't received from the total energy radiated by the sun.

Total energy radiated by the sun per second: 752 quintillion joules
Energy not received during nighttime: 346 quintillion joules

Energy received on Earth during nighttime per second:
752 quintillion joules - 346 quintillion joules = 406 quintillion joules

### Answer: 406 quintillion joules

Expected answer: 406

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A food festival has two different stalls, pizza and burgers. The pizza stall sells 442 pizzas in a day, and the burger stall sells 516 burgers in the same day. What is the total number of pizzas and burgers sold at the food festival?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The pizza stall sold 442 pizzas.
The burger stall sold 516 burgers.
The total number of pizzas and burgers sold at the food festival is 442 + 516 = <<442 + 516 = 958>>958.
### Answer: 958

Expected answer: 958

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After selling 442 pizzas and 516 burgers at a food festival, the organizers realize that there was a counting mistake. They had overcounted by 889 items. What is the correct total number of pizzas and burgers sold at the food festival?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The original total number of pizzas and burgers sold was 442 + 516 = 958.
However, there was an overcounting of 889 items.
To find the correct total, we need to subtract the overcounting from the original total:
958 - 889 = <<958 - 889 = 69>>69.
### Answer: 69

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In Mike's collection of building blocks, he has 416 red blocks. Later, he found an old box with 69 more red blocks. How many red blocks does Mike have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Mike originally had 416 red blocks in his collection.
2) Later, he found an old box with 69 more red blocks.
3) To find the total number of red blocks Mike has now, we add the original 416 blocks to the 69 additional blocks:
416 + 69 = <<416 + 69 = 485>>485

### Answer: 485

Expected answer: 485

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After counting all his red blocks, Mike realized there are 63 blue blocks as well. How many building blocks does Mike have in total now, if you combine both his red and blue blocks?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) Mike has 485 red blocks (from the previous problem)
2) Mike also has 63 blue blocks
3) To find the total number of building blocks, we add the red and blue blocks together:
485 red blocks + 63 blue blocks = <<485 + 63 = 548>>548 total building blocks

### Answer: 548

Expected answer: 548

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous question, we initially stated that Mike found an old box with 69 more red blocks. But, let's correct our story: actually, what Mike found was an older box which contained 266 more red blocks, not 69. So how many red blocks does Mike have now with this new finding?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's rework this with the new information:

1) Mike originally had 416 red blocks in his collection.
2) Later, he found an older box which contained 266 more red blocks.
3) To find the total number of red blocks Mike has now, we add the original 416 blocks to the 266 additional blocks:
416 + 266 = <<416 + 266 = 682>>682

### Answer: 682

Expected answer: 682

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Sally was playing in the snow. She made 573 smaller snowballs for a snowball fight. Later, she made 259 larger snowballs to build a fort. How many snowballs did Sally make in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Sally made 573 smaller snowballs for a snowball fight
* Later, she made 259 larger snowballs to build a fort
* To find the total number of snowballs she made, we add the two numbers together:
* 573 smaller snowballs + 259 larger snowballs = <<573 + 259 = 832>>832 snowballs in total

### Answer: 832

Expected answer: 832

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After forging 573 smaller snowballs for a snowball fight and 259 larger snowballs to build a fort, Sally successfully created an immense amount of snowballs. However, not satisfied, she decided to make an additional 7 giant snowballs to serve as the fort's watchtowers. How many snowballs in total did Sally end up making?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Sally made 573 smaller snowballs for a snowball fight
* She also made 259 larger snowballs to build a fort
* So the total number of snowballs made so far is:
  * 573 smaller snowballs + 259 larger snowballs = 832 snowballs
* Sally then decided to make an additional 7 giant snowballs to serve as the fort's watchtowers
* To find the total number of snowballs Sally made, we add the 7 giant snowballs to the 832 snowballs she had already made:
  * 832 snowballs + 7 giant snowballs = <<832 + 7 = 839>> 839 snowballs in total

### Answer: 839

Expected answer: 839

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing her snowball stockpile, Sally realized she had miscalculated. Instead of making 573 smaller snowballs, she had only made 124 of them for the snowball fight. She still made the same amount of larger snowballs for her fort - 259 in total. How many snowballs did Sally actually make now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's recalculate this with the new information:
* Sally made 124 smaller snowballs for the snowball fight
* She made 259 larger snowballs for the fort
* To find the total number of snowballs she made, we add the two numbers together:
* 124 smaller snowballs + 259 larger snowballs = <<124 + 259 = 383>>383 snowballs in total

### Answer: 383

Expected answer: 383

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A local library has 727 books in the children's section. There are 309 books that are on loan to children. After these books are loaned out, how many books are left to reach the total of 561 books that the librarian wants to have in the children's section?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The library has 727 books in the children's section.
2) 309 of those books are currently on loan to children.
3) The librarian wants to have a total of 561 books in the children's section.

To find how many more books are needed to reach the target of 561 books, we need to:
1) Subtract the 309 books that are currently on loan from the 727 total books.
2) Then, subtract that number from the target of 561 books.

Calculations:
727 total books - 309 books on loan = 418 books currently in the children's section.
561 target books - 418 books currently in the section = 143 more books needed.

### Answer: 143

Expected answer: 143

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A window manufacturing company initially has 984 windows in stock. After a purchase, they now have 597 windows left. How many windows were bought by the customers?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, the company had 984 windows in stock.
* After a purchase, they now have 597 windows left.
* To find the number of windows bought by the customers, we need to subtract the number of windows left from the initial number of windows.
* 984 - 597 = 387
* Therefore, the customers bought 387 windows.

### Answer: 387

Expected answer: 387

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the window manufacturing company initially had 973 windows in stock instead of 597. After the same purchase as before, how many windows would have been bought by the customers this time?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:
* Initially, the company had 973 windows in stock.
* After the purchase, they now have 597 windows left.
* To find the number of windows bought by the customers, we need to subtract the number of windows left from the initial number of windows.
* 973 - 597 = 376
* Therefore, the customers bought 376 windows.

### Answer: 376

Expected answer: 11

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: A factory produces 761 lamps a day. After some machinery issues, it dropped to 566 lamps a day. What is the difference in lamp production if the drop happened for two days?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The factory normally produces 761 lamps per day
* After some machinery issues, the production dropped to 566 lamps per day
* We need to find the difference in lamp production if this drop happened for two days

First, let's calculate the normal production for two days:
* 761 lamps per day x 2 days = 1,522 lamps

Next, let's calculate the reduced production for two days:
* 566 lamps per day x 2 days = 1,132 lamps

Finally, we can find the difference in lamp production:
* 1,522 lamps - 1,132 lamps = 390 lamps

### Answer: 390

Expected answer: 390

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a candy store, there are 801 chocolate bars on one shelf and 180 chocolate bars on another shelf. How many chocolate bars are there in total on both shelves?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* There are 801 chocolate bars on one shelf
* There are 180 chocolate bars on another shelf
* To find the total number of chocolate bars on both shelves, we add the two numbers together:
* 801 + 180 = 981

### Answer: 981

Expected answer: 981

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After counting the chocolate bars, the candy store owner decides to distribute 737 chocolate bars evenly among all the children in a local school. How many chocolate bars would remain in the store after the distribution?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There are 981 chocolate bars in total (from the previous problem)
* The candy store owner decides to distribute 737 chocolate bars evenly among the children in a local school
* To find the number of chocolate bars that would remain in the store after the distribution, we need to subtract the number of chocolate bars distributed (737) from the total number of chocolate bars (981)
* 981 - 737 = 244

### Answer: 244

Expected answer: 244

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of 801 chocolate bars, the store initially had a smaller stock of 286 chocolate bars on one shelf, while the number of chocolate bars on the other shelf remained the same at 180. How many chocolate bars would then be in total on both shelves?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* There are 286 chocolate bars on one shelf
* There are 180 chocolate bars on the other shelf
* To find the total number of chocolate bars on both shelves, we add the two numbers together:
* 286 + 180 = 466

### Answer: 466

Expected answer: 466

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A wildlife reserve has 889 elephants at the beginning of the year. Due to migration, 540 of these elephants leave the reserve. How many elephants are left in the reserve after migration?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The wildlife reserve had 889 elephants at the beginning of the year.
* 540 of these elephants left the reserve due to migration.
* To find the number of elephants left in the reserve after migration, we need to subtract the number of elephants that left from the original number of elephants.

Calculation:
* Original number of elephants: 889
* Number of elephants that left: 540
* Number of elephants left = 889 - 540 = 349

### Answer: 349

Expected answer: 349

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the migration mentioned in the previous problem, suppose that instead of 540 elephants leaving, 573 elephants migrated away from the wildlife reserve. How many elephants would be left in the reserve in that case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The wildlife reserve originally had 889 elephants.
* In this case, 573 elephants migrated away from the reserve.
* To find the number of elephants left in the reserve, we need to subtract the number of elephants that left from the original number of elephants.

Calculation:
* Original number of elephants: 889
* Number of elephants that left: 573
* Number of elephants left = 889 - 573 = 316

### Answer: 316

Expected answer: 316

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There are 95 beds in a single unit of the pediatric ward in a hospital. The hospital plans to add 3 additional beds in the unit. After the addition, how many beds will be there in the unit in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There are currently 95 beds in the pediatric ward unit.
* The hospital plans to add 3 additional beds to the unit.
* To find the total number of beds in the unit after the addition, we need to add the 3 new beds to the original 95 beds.

Calculation:
* Original number of beds: 95
* Additional beds to be added: 3
* Total number of beds after addition: 95 + 3 = 98

### Answer: 98

Expected answer: 98

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A cheese producer made 841 kilograms of cheese this month. However, due to damage and spoilage, they lost 40 kilograms. How many kilograms of cheese does the producer have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The cheese producer made 841 kilograms of cheese this month.
However, they lost 40 kilograms due to damage and spoilage.
To find the amount of cheese the producer has left, we need to subtract the amount lost from the total amount made.
841 kilograms - 40 kilograms = 801 kilograms.
### Answer: 801

Expected answer: 801

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After assessing the damage and spoilage, the cheese producer also had an additional 156 kilograms of cheese in storage. How many kilograms of cheese does the producer have in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The cheese producer had 801 kilograms of cheese left after the damage and spoilage.
They also had an additional 156 kilograms of cheese in storage.
To find the total amount of cheese the producer has now, we need to add the amount left after the damage and spoilage to the additional amount in storage.
801 kilograms + 156 kilograms = 957 kilograms.
### Answer: 957

Expected answer: 957

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a different month, the cheese producer made 218 kilograms of cheese. However, this month also had its challenges and the producer lost 40 kilograms due to damage and spoilage, just like in the previous scenario. How many kilograms of cheese does the producer have left this month?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The cheese producer made 218 kilograms of cheese this month.
However, they lost 40 kilograms due to damage and spoilage.
To find the amount of cheese the producer has left, we need to subtract the amount lost from the total amount made.
218 kilograms - 40 kilograms = 178 kilograms.
### Answer: 178

Expected answer: 178

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A company that constructs and installs windows received an order to make 115 residential windows and 240 commercial windows. How many windows in total did the company get ordered to make?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The company received an order to make 115 residential windows and 240 commercial windows.
To find the total number of windows ordered, we need to add the number of residential windows and the number of commercial windows.
Total number of windows ordered = 115 residential windows + 240 commercial windows
Total number of windows ordered = 115 + 240 = 355

### Answer: 355

Expected answer: 355

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After finishing the current orders of 115 residential windows and 240 commercial windows, the company received an additional order for 346 more windows. What is the total number of windows the company has been ordered to make now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The company initially received an order for:
- 115 residential windows
- 240 commercial windows
The total number of windows from the initial order is:
115 + 240 = 355 windows

The company then received an additional order for 346 more windows.
To find the total number of windows the company has been ordered to make, we need to add the initial order and the additional order:
Total number of windows ordered = Initial order + Additional order
Total number of windows ordered = 355 + 346 = 701

### Answer: 701

Expected answer: 701

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose initially, instead of 115 residential windows, the company had received an order for 518 residential windows while keeping the same number of commercial windows. How many windows in total would have been ordered then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, the company received an order for 518 residential windows and 240 commercial windows.
To find the total number of windows ordered, we need to add the number of residential windows and the number of commercial windows.
Total number of windows ordered = 518 residential windows + 240 commercial windows
Total number of windows ordered = 518 + 240 = 758

### Answer: 758

Expected answer: 758

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A robot factory produces 580 robots a day. During a production issue, the factory was only able to produce 531 robots. How many robots still needed to be produced that day to reach the daily production target?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The robot factory produces 580 robots a day as their daily production target.
* During a production issue, the factory was only able to produce 531 robots.
* To find the number of robots still needed to be produced that day to reach the daily production target, we need to subtract the number of robots actually produced (531) from the daily production target (580).

Calculation:
Daily production target: 580 robots
Robots actually produced: 531 robots
Robots still needed to be produced: 580 - 531 = 49 robots

### Answer: 49

Expected answer: 49

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the robot factory initially planned to produce 900 robots instead of 580. After experiencing the same production issue that allowed them to produce only 531 robots, how many robots still needed to be produced that day to reach the new production target?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The robot factory initially planned to produce 900 robots as their daily production target.
* During the production issue, the factory was only able to produce 531 robots.
* To find the number of robots still needed to be produced that day to reach the new production target of 900 robots, we need to subtract the number of robots actually produced (531) from the new production target (900).

Calculation:
New production target: 900 robots
Robots actually produced: 531 robots
Robots still needed to be produced: 900 - 531 = 369 robots

### Answer: 369

Expected answer: 369

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A warehouse had 400 lamps in the beginning. Due to popular demand, 384 lamps were sold. How many lamps are still in the warehouse?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The warehouse had 400 lamps in the beginning.
384 lamps were sold.
To find the number of lamps still in the warehouse, we need to subtract the number of lamps sold from the initial number of lamps.
400 - 384 = <<400 - 384 = 16>>16 lamps are still in the warehouse.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the popular demand, the warehouse received a new shipment of 386 lamps to add to their existing inventory. Now, how many lamps does the warehouse have after the new shipment arrived?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, the warehouse had 16 lamps remaining after the 384 lamps were sold.
The warehouse then received a new shipment of 386 lamps.
To find the total number of lamps in the warehouse after the new shipment, we need to add the new lamps to the existing inventory.
16 + 386 = <<16 + 386 = 402>>402 lamps are in the warehouse after the new shipment arrived.

### Answer: 402

Expected answer: 402

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a different scenario, imagine the warehouse originally had 400 lamps but due to popular demand, this time, only 69 lamps were sold off. How many lamps would remain in the warehouse in this case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The warehouse originally had 400 lamps.
69 lamps were sold.
To find the number of lamps remaining in the warehouse, we need to subtract the number of lamps sold from the initial number of lamps.
400 - 69 = <<400 - 69 = 331>>331 lamps remain in the warehouse.

### Answer: 331

Expected answer: 331

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A shoe manufacturer has a monthly production cap of 99 pairs of running shoes. This month, they decided to expand the production of running shoes by 899 pairs. How many pairs of running shoes is the manufacturer planning to produce this month?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The manufacturer has a monthly production cap of 99 pairs of running shoes.
2) This month, they decided to expand the production by 899 pairs.
3) To find the total number of pairs of running shoes the manufacturer is planning to produce this month, we add the original cap of 99 pairs to the expansion of 899 pairs.
4) 99 + 899 = 998 pairs of running shoes.

### Answer: 998

Expected answer: 998

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the manufacturer initially planned to expand the production of running shoes by only 310 pairs instead of 899. In this case, how many pairs of running shoes would the manufacturer have planned to produce that month?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

1) The manufacturer has a monthly production cap of 99 pairs of running shoes.
2) Initially, they planned to expand the production by 310 pairs.
3) To find the total number of pairs of running shoes the manufacturer would have planned to produce, we add the original cap of 99 pairs to the expansion of 310 pairs.
4) 99 + 310 = 409 pairs of running shoes.

### Answer: 409

Expected answer: 409

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Mia received 961 gifts on her birthday. She donated 432 of them to charity. To the remaining gifts, her friend Anna decided to add her own 415 gifts before giving them to Mia. How many gifts does Mia have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. Mia received 961 gifts on her birthday.
2. She donated 432 of them to charity.
3. The remaining gifts after the donation are: 961 - 432 = 529 gifts.
4. Mia's friend Anna added 415 more gifts to the remaining 529 gifts.
5. The total number of gifts Mia has now is: 529 + 415 = 944 gifts.

### Answer: 944

Expected answer: 944

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead that Mia received 874 gifts for her birthday, but still donated 432 of them to charity. If her friend Anna still added her own 415 gifts to the remaining, how many gifts would Mia have had in this situation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

1. Mia received 874 gifts on her birthday.
2. She donated 432 of them to charity.
3. The remaining gifts after the donation are: 874 - 432 = 442 gifts.
4. Mia's friend Anna added 415 more gifts to the remaining 442 gifts.
5. The total number of gifts Mia has now is: 442 + 415 = 857 gifts.

### Answer: 857

Expected answer: 857

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Nancy runs a bakery and yesterday she baked 72 chocolate cakes. Today, she baked 59 more cakes than yesterday. How many cakes did Nancy bake today?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Yesterday, Nancy baked 72 chocolate cakes
* Today, she baked 59 more cakes than yesterday

To find the number of cakes baked today, we add 59 to the number of cakes baked yesterday:
* Cakes baked today = 72 + 59 = 131

### Answer: 131

Expected answer: 131

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following her baking spree, the next day Nancy received a special order for a party. She had to bake an additional 570 cakes. How many chocolate cakes in total has Nancy baked in these three days?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's go through this step-by-step:
* Yesterday, Nancy baked 72 cakes
* Today, she baked 131 cakes (as calculated in the previous problem)
* The next day, she had to bake an additional 570 cakes for a special order

To find the total number of cakes baked over the three days, we add up the cakes baked each day:
* Total cakes baked = 72 + 131 + 570 = 773

### Answer: 773

Expected answer: 701

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a large city, exterminators successfully remove 893 mice from homes and businesses within a week. By the end of the week, 74 mice had managed to return. How many mice did the exterminators successfully keep out of the homes and businesses?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The exterminators successfully removed 893 mice from homes and businesses within a week.
However, by the end of the week, 74 mice had managed to return.
Therefore, the number of mice the exterminators successfully kept out of the homes and businesses is:
893 - 74 = <<893 - 74 = 819>>819

### Answer: 819

Expected answer: 819

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After considering the original situation where exterminators removed 893 mice from homes and businesses, let's revise the number of mice that had managed to return. Instead of 74 mice, 117 mice found their way back. How many mice were successfully kept out of the homes and businesses in the revised scenario?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this revised problem.

Reasoning:
The exterminators successfully removed 893 mice from homes and businesses within a week.
However, by the end of the week, 117 mice had managed to return.
Therefore, the number of mice the exterminators successfully kept out of the homes and businesses is:
893 - 117 = <<893 - 117 = 776>>776

### Answer: 776

Expected answer: 776

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A toy shop has 960 stuffed animals at the beginning of the day. As the day progresses, they sell 22 stuffed animals. How many stuffed animals are left at the end of the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The toy shop had 960 stuffed animals at the beginning of the day.
They sold 22 stuffed animals during the day.
To find the number of stuffed animals left at the end of the day, we need to subtract the number of stuffed animals sold from the initial number of stuffed animals.
960 - 22 = <<960 - 22 = 938>>938 stuffed animals left at the end of the day.

### Answer: 938

Expected answer: 938

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After selling 22 stuffed animals, the toy shop decided to donate 681 of the remaining stuffed animals to a local charity. How many stuffed animals are left in the store after the donation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The toy shop had 938 stuffed animals left after selling 22 earlier in the day.
They then decided to donate 681 of the remaining stuffed animals to a local charity.
To find the number of stuffed animals left in the store after the donation, we need to subtract the number of donated stuffed animals from the remaining stuffed animals.
938 - 681 = <<938 - 681 = 257>>257 stuffed animals left in the store after the donation.

### Answer: 257

Expected answer: 257

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a hat shop, there are 606 hats for adults. Today, they received a new shipment of 90 kids' hats. How many hats are there in total in the hat shop now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 606 hats for adults in the hat shop
* They received a new shipment of 90 kids' hats
* To find the total number of hats in the hat shop now, we add the original number of adult hats and the new shipment of kids' hats:
* 606 adult hats + 90 kids' hats = 696 hats in total

### Answer: 696

Expected answer: 696

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The hat shop also had 786 hats for teens, but they decided to move some to another store. After removing the same number of teen hats as there are now total hats in the shop, how many teen hats are left in the shop?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 786 hats for teens in the hat shop
* The total number of hats in the shop now is 696 (from the previous question)
* They decided to move the same number of teen hats as there are now total hats in the shop
* So, they moved 696 teen hats to the other store
* To find the number of teen hats left in the shop, we take the original 786 and subtract the 696 that were moved:
* 786 teen hats - 696 teen hats moved = 90 teen hats left in the shop

### Answer: 90

Expected answer: 90

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the hat shop initially received a much larger shipment of kids' hats, specifically 348 kids' hats, instead of 90. In that case, how many hats would there be in total in the hat shop now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 606 hats for adults in the hat shop
* They received a new shipment of 348 kids' hats
* To find the total number of hats in the hat shop now, we add the original number of adult hats and the new shipment of kids' hats:
* 606 adult hats + 348 kids' hats = 954 hats in total

### Answer: 954

Expected answer: 954

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A city water treatment plant processes 391 million gallons of water during the day. At night, they process an additional 176 million gallons. How many gallons of water does the plant process in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
During the day, the plant processes 391 million gallons of water.
At night, the plant processes an additional 176 million gallons of water.
To find the total amount of water processed, we add the day and night amounts:
391 million gallons + 176 million gallons = <<391 + 176 = 567>> 567 million gallons.

### Answer: 567 million gallons.

Expected answer: 567

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the city water treatment plant processes 391 million gallons of water during the day and an additional 176 million gallons at night, the nearby factory requests that an additional 303 million gallons be processed for their industrial needs. How many total gallons of water will the plant need to process to meet all these requirements?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) During the day, the plant processes 391 million gallons of water.
2) At night, the plant processes an additional 176 million gallons of water.
3) The total amount of water processed during the day and night is:
   391 million + 176 million = 567 million gallons
4) The nearby factory then requests an additional 303 million gallons to be processed.
5) To meet all the requirements, the plant will need to process:
   567 million gallons + 303 million gallons = <<567 + 303 = 870>> 870 million gallons.

### Answer: 870 million gallons.

Expected answer: 870

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose after careful review, it was discovered that the city water treatment plant actually processed 438 million gallons of water during the day, and not the originally reported 391 million gallons, while still processing an additional 176 million gallons at night. How many total gallons of water did the plant process considering this revised daytime figure?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this revised problem.

Reasoning:
During the day, the plant processed 438 million gallons of water.
At night, the plant processed an additional 176 million gallons of water.
To find the total amount of water processed, we add the day and night amounts:
438 million gallons + 176 million gallons = <<438 + 176 = 614>> 614 million gallons.

### Answer: 614 million gallons.

Expected answer: 614

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A water reservoir has a capacity of 927 gallons. If 133 gallons are used, how many gallons remain in the reservoir?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) The water reservoir has a capacity of 927 gallons.
2) 133 gallons were used from the reservoir.
3) To find the remaining gallons, we need to subtract the used gallons from the total capacity:
927 gallons - 133 gallons = <<927 - 133 = 794>>794 gallons remain in the reservoir.

### Answer: 794

Expected answer: 794

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original problem, the reservoir started with 927 gallons. But what if the reservoir started with 892 gallons instead and still 133 gallons were used? How many gallons would remain in the reservoir now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this new problem step-by-step:
1) The water reservoir originally had 892 gallons.
2) 133 gallons were used from the reservoir.
3) To find the remaining gallons, we need to subtract the used gallons from the original amount:
892 gallons - 133 gallons = <<892 - 133 = 759>>759 gallons remain in the reservoir.

### Answer: 759

Expected answer: 759

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a large farmscape, there are 921 tomato plants growing in the north field. The farmer then plants another 52 tomato plants in the south field. How many tomato plants are there in total on the farmer's land?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The farmer has 921 tomato plants in the north field and 52 tomato plants in the south field.
To find the total number of tomato plants, we add the number of plants in the north field and the number of plants in the south field:
921 + 52 = <<921 + 52 = 973>>973 tomato plants in total on the farmer's land.
### Answer: 973

Expected answer: 973

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a large farmscape, there are 921 tomato plants growing in the north field. The farmer then plants another 52 tomato plants in the south field. After a week, unfortunately, 204 of these plants are destroyed by pests. How many tomato plants does the farmer now have after the damage caused by the pests?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The farmer initially had:
- 921 tomato plants in the north field
- 52 tomato plants in the south field
So the total number of tomato plants before the pest damage was:
921 + 52 = 973 tomato plants

After the pest damage, 204 tomato plants were destroyed.
So the number of tomato plants the farmer has now is:
973 - 204 = <<973 - 204 = 769>>769 tomato plants.

### Answer: 769

Expected answer: 769

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a large farmscape, there are 831 tomato plants initially growing in the north field as opposed to the 921 there were initially. The farmer then plants another 52 tomato plants in the south field. How many tomato plants are there in total on the farmer's land now, considering this new initial amount?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning: The farmer initially had 831 tomato plants in the north field, and then planted 52 more in the south field.
To find the total number of tomato plants, we add the number of plants in the north field and the number of plants in the south field:
831 + 52 = <<831 + 52 = 883>>883 tomato plants in total on the farmer's land.
### Answer: 883

Expected answer: 883

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Billy has a total of 314 building blocks. However, he lends a set of 20 building blocks to his friend John and another 88 building blocks to his friend Sam. How many building blocks does Billy have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Billy has a total of 314 building blocks
* He lends 20 building blocks to his friend John
* He lends 88 building blocks to his friend Sam

To find out how many building blocks Billy has left, we need to subtract the number of building blocks he lent out from the total number of building blocks he had.

So, the calculation is:
* Total building blocks: 314
* Lent to John: 20
* Lent to Sam: 88
* Building blocks left for Billy: 314 - 20 - 88 = <<314 - 20 - 88 = 206>>206

### Answer: 206

Expected answer: 206

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Now, imagine that Billy initially had 879 building blocks instead of 314 and he still lent the same amount to his friends, John and Sam. How many building blocks would Billy have left then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* Billy initially had 879 building blocks
* He lent 20 building blocks to his friend John
* He lent 88 building blocks to his friend Sam

To find out how many building blocks Billy has left, we need to subtract the number of building blocks he lent out from the total number of building blocks he had.

So, the calculation is:
* Total building blocks: 879
* Lent to John: 20
* Lent to Sam: 88
* Building blocks left for Billy: 879 - 20 - 88 = <<879 - 20 - 88 = 771>>771

### Answer: 771

Expected answer: 771

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A cat lover has 467 feline-themed decorative items in her collection. She decides to give away 434 items to a Cat Museum. How many cat-themed decorative items does she have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The cat lover has 467 feline-themed decorative items in her collection.
* She decides to give away 434 items to a Cat Museum.
* To find the number of items she has left, we need to subtract the number of items she gave away from the total number of items she had.

467 (total items) - 434 (items given away) = <<467 - 434 = 33>>33 items left.

### Answer: 33

Expected answer: 33

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Original problem: A cat lover has 467 feline-themed decorative items in her collection. She decides to give away 434 items to a Cat Museum. How many cat-themed decorative items does she have left? Follow-up problem: Suppose initially, the cat lover decided to give away only 91 items to the Cat Museum, instead of 434. How many cat-themed decorative items would she have left then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve the follow-up problem.

Given information:
- The cat lover initially had 467 feline-themed decorative items in her collection.
- She decided to give away only 91 items to the Cat Museum, instead of 434.

To find the number of cat-themed decorative items she would have left, we need to subtract the number of items she gave away from the total number of items she had.

Total items: 467
Items given away: 91
Items left: 467 - 91 = <<467 - 91 = 376>>376

### Answer: 376

Expected answer: 376

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A helicopter company has 631 helicopters in total. Recently, they moved 140 helicopters to a new location. How many helicopters are left at their original location after the move?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The helicopter company had 631 helicopters in total.
They moved 140 helicopters to a new location.
To find the number of helicopters left at the original location, we need to subtract the number of helicopters moved from the total number of helicopters.
631 - 140 = <<631 - 140 = 491>>491 helicopters are left at the original location after the move.
### Answer: 491

Expected answer: 491

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the initial move of 140 helicopters to a new location, the helicopter company shipped an additional 217 helicopters from their manufacturing plant to the original location. After this addition, how many helicopters are now located at the original location?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, the helicopter company had 631 helicopters in total.
They moved 140 helicopters to a new location, leaving 631 - 140 = 491 helicopters at the original location.
After that, the company shipped an additional 217 helicopters from their manufacturing plant to the original location.
To find the total number of helicopters at the original location, we need to add the 217 helicopters to the 491 helicopters that were already there.
491 + 217 = <<491 + 217 = 708>>708 helicopters are now located at the original location.
### Answer: 708

Expected answer: 708

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the helicopter company initially had 814 helicopters instead of 631. They still moved 140 helicopters to the new location. In this scenario, how many helicopters would be left at their original location after the move?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The helicopter company initially had 814 helicopters.
They moved 140 helicopters to a new location.
To find the number of helicopters left at the original location, we need to subtract the number of helicopters moved from the total number of helicopters.
814 - 140 = <<814 - 140 = 674>>674 helicopters are left at the original location after the move.
### Answer: 674

Expected answer: 674

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farm has a total of 311 apple trees and 236 orange trees. Additionally, there are 379 lemon trees on this farm. How many trees are there in total on this farm?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The farm has 311 apple trees
* The farm has 236 orange trees
* The farm has 379 lemon trees

To find the total number of trees on the farm, we need to add up the number of each type of tree:
* Total trees = 311 (apple trees) + 236 (orange trees) + 379 (lemon trees)
* Total trees = 311 + 236 + 379
* Total trees = 926

### Answer: 926

Expected answer: 926

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After counting all the trees, the farmer realized that he made a mistake and accidentally included 447 young seedlings that have not yet fully grown into trees in his total count. With this error in mind, how many fully-grown trees are actually on the farm?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

* Originally, the total number of trees on the farm was 926
* The farmer realized he accidentally included 447 young seedlings that have not fully grown into trees
* To find the number of fully-grown trees, we need to subtract the 447 young seedlings from the original total of 926 trees

Calculation:
* Total trees originally = 926
* Subtract young seedlings = 926 - 447 = 479

### Answer: 479

Expected answer: 479

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Upon further review, the farmer realized that he miscounted his lemon trees. Instead of 379 lemon trees, he had only 130 lemon trees on the farm. With this new corrected count, how many fully-grown trees are actually on the farm now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's recalculate the total number of trees on the farm with the corrected lemon tree count.

* The farm has 311 apple trees
* The farm has 236 orange trees 
* The farm has 130 lemon trees (corrected count)

To find the total number of trees, we add up the counts for each type:
* Total trees = 311 (apple trees) + 236 (orange trees) + 130 (lemon trees)
* Total trees = 311 + 236 + 130
* Total trees = 677

### Answer: 677

Expected answer: 677

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a mystical fairy land, there were originally 748 fairies. However, due to an unknown reason, 302 fairies have mysteriously disappeared. How many fairies are left in the fairy land?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 748 fairies in the fairy land.
* 302 fairies have mysteriously disappeared.
* To find the number of fairies left, we need to subtract the number of fairies that disappeared from the original number of fairies.

Calculation:
* Original number of fairies: 748
* Number of fairies that disappeared: 302
* Number of fairies left = 748 - 302 = 446

### Answer: 446

Expected answer: 446

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a twist of events, it turned out that not 302 but only 245 fairies had disappeared from the mystical fairy land where originally 748 fairies lived. Now, with this corrected information, how many fairies are currently residing in the fairy land?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 748 fairies in the fairy land.
* 245 fairies have mysteriously disappeared.
* To find the number of fairies left, we need to subtract the number of fairies that disappeared from the original number of fairies.

Calculation:
* Original number of fairies: 748
* Number of fairies that disappeared: 245
* Number of fairies left = 748 - 245 = 503

### Answer: 503

Expected answer: 503

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Susie has a goal to play 770 pages of piano music this month. She has already played through 391 pages. How many more pages of piano music does Susie have to play to reach her goal?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Susie's goal is to play 770 pages of piano music this month.
She has already played through 391 pages.
To find how many more pages she needs to play, we subtract the pages she has already played from her goal:
770 pages - 391 pages = <<770 - 391 = 379>>379 pages

### Answer: 379

Expected answer: 379

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Susie has a goal to play 770 pages of piano music this month. She has already played through 391 pages. In addition to meeting her goal, she also wishes to learn 151 new pages of music. How many total pages of piano music does Susie still need to play and learn to meet her goal and learn all the new pieces?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Susie's goal is to play 770 pages of piano music this month.
2) She has already played through 391 pages.
3) In addition to meeting her goal, she also wishes to learn 151 new pages of music.

To find the total pages Susie still needs to play and learn, we need to:
1) Find how many pages she has left to play to meet her 770 page goal.
2) Add the 151 new pages she wants to learn.

Step 1: 
Susie's goal is 770 pages
She has already played 391 pages
So, the pages she has left to play to meet her goal is:
770 pages - 391 pages = 379 pages

Step 2:
Add the 151 new pages she wants to learn:
379 pages + 151 pages = 530 pages

### Answer: 530

Expected answer: 530

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous question, we learned that Susie had a goal to play 770 pages of piano music this month and she had already played through 391 pages. Now, suppose that her original goal was to play 708 pages of piano music this month. How many more pages of piano music does Susie have to play now to reach this adjusted goal?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

1. Susie's original goal was to play 770 pages of piano music this month.
2. She had already played through 391 pages.
3. So the number of pages she still needed to play to reach her original goal was:
   770 pages - 391 pages = 379 pages

4. Now, we're told that her adjusted goal is 708 pages.
5. To find how many more pages she needs to play to reach this adjusted goal, we take the adjusted goal (708 pages) and subtract the pages she has already played (391 pages):
   708 pages - 391 pages = <<708 - 391 = 317>>317 pages

### Answer: 317

Expected answer: 317

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A talented ballerina practices her routine daily. She does 212 pirouettes in the morning before lunch. After lunch she does 363 additional pirouettes. How many pirouettes does she do in a day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the morning, the ballerina does 212 pirouettes.
After lunch, she does 363 additional pirouettes.
To find the total number of pirouettes she does in a day, we add the morning and afternoon pirouettes:
212 + 363 = <<212 + 363 = 575>>575 pirouettes.

### Answer: 575

Expected answer: 575

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from our previous problem, the ballerina, later in the evening, decided to add to her routine and performed some more pirouettes. However, she was a bit tired and was unable to count exactly how many she did. She only knew that after those additional pirouettes, the total number of pirouettes she did for the day was 314 less than if she had doubled the number of pirouettes she performed before dinner. How many pirouettes did she do after dinner?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* In the morning, the ballerina did 212 pirouettes
* After lunch, she did 363 additional pirouettes
* So the total number of pirouettes before dinner was 212 + 363 = 575 pirouettes

Now, the question states that the total number of pirouettes for the day was 314 less than if she had doubled the number of pirouettes she performed before dinner.

So, if she had doubled the number of pirouettes before dinner (575 x 2 = 1150), the total number of pirouettes for the day would have been 1150.
But the actual total number of pirouettes for the day was 314 less than that, which means the total was 1150 - 314 = 836.

Therefore, the number of pirouettes she did after dinner must have been 836 - 575 = <<836 - 575 = 261>>261 pirouettes.

### Answer: 261

Expected answer: 261

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's revisit the situation with our diligent ballerina. But this time, instead of doing 363 pirouettes after lunch, she decided to push a bit harder and performed 701 pirouettes instead. How many pirouettes did she do in total for that day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the morning, the ballerina did 212 pirouettes
* After lunch, she did 701 additional pirouettes
* To find the total number of pirouettes for the day, we add the morning and afternoon pirouettes:
* 212 + 701 = <<212 + 701 = 913>>913 pirouettes

### Answer: 913

Expected answer: 913

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: An airport handles 520 departures and 423 arrivals of planes every day. How many planes does the airport handle in total each day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The airport handles 520 departures and 423 arrivals of planes every day.
To find the total number of planes the airport handles each day, we need to add the number of departures and arrivals.
Total planes handled per day = Departures + Arrivals
Total planes handled per day = 520 + 423 = 943
### Answer: 943

Expected answer: 943

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After counting the departures and arrivals, an airport handles 943 total planes every day. However, on a certain day, due to unforeseen weather conditions, 773 planes couldn't take off or land. How many planes were able to be handled by the airport that day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The airport normally handles 943 total planes every day.
However, on a certain day, 773 planes couldn't take off or land due to unforeseen weather conditions.
To find the number of planes that were able to be handled by the airport that day, we need to subtract the number of planes that couldn't take off or land from the total number of planes the airport normally handles.
Planes able to be handled = Total planes normally handled - Planes that couldn't take off or land
Planes able to be handled = 943 - 773 = 170
### Answer: 170

Expected answer: 170

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The airport was initially handling a total of 943 planes every day, but due to fuel shortages, the number of departures drops from 520 to 359. Keeping the number of arrivals constant at 423, how many planes does the airport handle in total each day now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, the airport was handling 943 planes per day:
Total planes handled per day = Departures + Arrivals
Total planes handled per day = 520 + 423 = 943

Now, due to fuel shortages, the number of departures has dropped from 520 to 359.
The number of arrivals remains constant at 423.

To find the new total number of planes the airport handles each day, we need to add the new number of departures and the constant number of arrivals.
New total planes handled per day = New Departures + Arrivals
New total planes handled per day = 359 + 423 = 782

### Answer: 782

Expected answer: 782

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a park, there are 35 maple trees. The number of pine trees in the park is the same as the number of maple trees. How many trees in total are there in the park?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) There are 35 maple trees in the park.
2) The number of pine trees is the same as the number of maple trees.
3) To find the total number of trees, we need to add the number of maple trees and the number of pine trees.
4) Since the number of pine trees is the same as the number of maple trees, we can simply double the number of maple trees.
5) 35 maple trees x 2 = 70 pine trees.
6) The total number of trees in the park is 35 maple trees + 70 pine trees = 105 trees.

### Answer: 105

Expected answer: 70

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a multiplayer online game, 201 players joined the server in the morning. In the afternoon, 620 more players joined. How many players joined the server over the course of the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the morning, 201 players joined the server.
In the afternoon, 620 more players joined the server.
To find the total number of players who joined the server over the course of the day, we need to add the number of players who joined in the morning and the number of players who joined in the afternoon.

Total players who joined the server = 201 + 620 = <<201 + 620 = 821>>821

### Answer: 821

Expected answer: 821

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the multiplayer online game, there is a maximum server capacity of 954 players. Given the number of players who joined in the morning and afternoon, how many more players can join before the server becomes full?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
We know that:
- 201 players joined in the morning
- 620 more players joined in the afternoon
- The maximum server capacity is 954 players

To find how many more players can join before the server becomes full, we need to subtract the total number of players who have joined so far from the maximum server capacity.

Total players who have joined so far = 201 + 620 = 821
Maximum server capacity = 954
Remaining capacity = 954 - 821 = <<954 - 821 = 133>>133

### Answer: 133

Expected answer: 133

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the multiplayer online game, imagine instead that only 99 more players joined the server in the afternoon instead of 620. How many players would have joined the server over the course of the day then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the morning, 201 players joined the server
* In the afternoon, 99 more players joined the server
* To find the total number of players who joined the server over the course of the day, we add the morning and afternoon numbers:
* Total players who joined = 201 + 99 = <<201 + 99 = 300>>300

### Answer: 300

Expected answer: 300

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer has 804 tomatoes at the beginning of the day. By the end of the day, he has sold off 560 tomatoes at the farmer's market. How many tomatoes does the farmer have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The farmer started with 804 tomatoes.
He sold 560 tomatoes at the farmer's market.
To find the number of tomatoes the farmer has left, we need to subtract the number of tomatoes sold from the initial number of tomatoes.
804 - 560 = <<804 - 560 = 244>>244 tomatoes.

### Answer: 244

Expected answer: 244

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After selling 560 tomatoes, the farmer finds another box in his truck that he forgot to bring to the market. The box contains 195 additional tomatoes. How many tomatoes does the farmer have altogether after adding the ones from the forgotten box?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The farmer started with 804 tomatoes.
He sold 560 tomatoes at the farmer's market.
So, the farmer had 804 - 560 = 244 tomatoes left.
The farmer then found an additional 195 tomatoes in a forgotten box.
To find the total number of tomatoes the farmer has, we need to add the 195 tomatoes from the forgotten box to the 244 tomatoes he had left.
244 + 195 = <<244 + 195 = 439>>439 tomatoes.

### Answer: 439

Expected answer: 439

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: On day 1 of their mission, astronauts on the International Space Station covered a distance of 501 kilometers. On the very next day, they covered 369 kilometers less. How many kilometers did the astronauts cover on the second day of their mission?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* On day 1, the astronauts covered 501 kilometers
* On day 2, they covered 369 kilometers less than on day 1

To find the distance covered on day 2, we need to subtract 369 kilometers from the distance covered on day 1:
* Distance covered on day 2 = 501 kilometers - 369 kilometers
* Distance covered on day 2 = 132 kilometers

### Answer: 132 kilometers

Expected answer: 132

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A jewelry store sells 557 gold necklaces. Then, they sell 138 more on a special sale event. How many necklaces did the jewelry store sell in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The jewelry store initially sold 557 gold necklaces.
2) Then, they sold 138 more necklaces during a special sale event.
3) To find the total number of necklaces sold, we add the two numbers together:
557 + 138 = 695

### Answer: 695

Expected answer: 695

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Initially, the jewelry store had 554 gold necklaces, and they sold an additional 138 during a special sale event. How many gold necklaces did the jewelry store sell in total considering this initial count?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) The jewelry store initially had 554 gold necklaces.
2) They then sold an additional 138 necklaces during a special sale event.
3) To find the total number of necklaces sold, we add the two numbers together:
554 + 138 = 692

### Answer: 692

Expected answer: 692

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A backpack manufacturer has 903 units in their warehouse inventory. They send out 203 backpacks to a local retailer. How many backpacks remain in their warehouse inventory?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The manufacturer had 903 units in their warehouse inventory.
They sent out 203 backpacks to a local retailer.
To find the number of backpacks remaining in the warehouse inventory, we need to subtract the number of backpacks sent out from the total number of backpacks in the warehouse.

903 - 203 = <<903 - 203 = 700>>700 backpacks remain in the warehouse inventory.

### Answer: 700

Expected answer: 700

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: A backpack manufacturer has 903 units in their warehouse inventory. They send out 203 backpacks to a local retailer. Afterwards, they send 329 more backpacks to another retailer. How many backpacks remain in their warehouse inventory now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The manufacturer had 903 units in their warehouse inventory.
They sent out 203 backpacks to a local retailer.
After that, they sent 329 more backpacks to another retailer.
To find the number of backpacks remaining in the warehouse inventory, we need to subtract the total number of backpacks sent out from the initial inventory.

Initial inventory: 903 backpacks
Backpacks sent to first retailer: 203
Backpacks sent to second retailer: 329
Total backpacks sent out: 203 + 329 = 532
Backpacks remaining in warehouse inventory: 903 - 532 = <<903 - 532 = 371>>371

### Answer: 371

Expected answer: 371

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, suppose the backpack manufacturer initially had 903 units in their warehouse inventory. But this time, instead of sending out 203 backpacks to a local retailer, they decide to send out 331 backpacks to that retailer. Now, how many backpacks remain in their warehouse inventory?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The manufacturer initially had 903 units in their warehouse inventory.
* They decided to send out 331 backpacks to the local retailer.
* To find the number of backpacks remaining in the warehouse inventory, we need to subtract the number of backpacks sent out from the total number of backpacks in the warehouse.

903 - 331 = <<903 - 331 = 572>>572 backpacks remain in the warehouse inventory.

### Answer: 572

Expected answer: 572

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a soap factory, a worker started with 241 bars of soap in the morning. By the afternoon, 21 bars of soap were packed and ready for shipment. How many bars of soap remained in the factory after the worker packed some of them?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The worker started with 241 bars of soap in the morning.
* By the afternoon, 21 bars of soap were packed and ready for shipment.
* To find the number of bars of soap that remained in the factory, we need to subtract the number of bars that were packed from the initial amount.

Calculation:
* Initial amount of bars of soap: 241
* Bars of soap packed: 21
* Bars of soap remaining: 241 - 21 = 220

### Answer: 220

Expected answer: 220

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After packing the 21 bars of soap in the afternoon, 30 more bars of soap were produced by the workers in the soap factory. What is the total number of soap bars in the factory now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 241 bars of soap in the factory.
* 21 bars of soap were packed and shipped in the afternoon.
* This left 241 - 21 = 220 bars of soap remaining in the factory.
* Then, 30 more bars of soap were produced by the workers.

To find the total number of soap bars in the factory now, we need to add the 30 newly produced bars to the 220 bars that were remaining.

Calculation:
* Bars of soap remaining after packing: 220
* New bars of soap produced: 30
* Total bars of soap in the factory now: 220 + 30 = 250

### Answer: 250

Expected answer: 250

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of starting with 241 bars of soap in the morning, the factory had started with 854 bars. If the worker again packed 21 bars of soap as before, how many bars of soap would remain now in the factory?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* The factory started with 854 bars of soap in the morning.
* The worker packed 21 bars of soap in the afternoon.
* To find the number of bars of soap that remained in the factory, we need to subtract the number of bars that were packed from the initial amount.

Calculation:
* Initial amount of bars of soap: 854
* Bars of soap packed: 21
* Bars of soap remaining: 854 - 21 = 833

### Answer: 833

Expected answer: 833

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At the beginning of day, a haberdashery has 999 hats in stock. By the end of the day, they sold 125 hats. How many hats does the haberdashery have in stock at the end of the day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The haberdashery started the day with 999 hats in stock.
They sold 125 hats during the day.
To find the number of hats in stock at the end of the day, we need to subtract the number of hats sold from the initial stock.
999 - 125 = 874
### Answer: 874

Expected answer: 874

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: At the beginning of the day, a haberdashery has 999 hats in stock. By the end of the day, they sold 125 hats. The following day, they sold an additional 421 hats. How many hats does the haberdashery have in stock at the end of the second day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
On the first day:
* The haberdashery started with 999 hats in stock.
* They sold 125 hats.
* So, at the end of the first day, they had 999 - 125 = 874 hats in stock.

On the second day:
* They sold an additional 421 hats.
* So, at the end of the second day, they had 874 - 421 = 453 hats in stock.

### Answer: 453

Expected answer: 453

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: At the beginning of the day, a haberdashery has 999 hats in stock. Instead of selling 125 hats as it was earlier, this time they sold 759 hats on the first day. How many hats does the haberdashery have in stock at the end of this first day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The haberdashery started the day with 999 hats in stock.
They sold 759 hats during the day.
To find the number of hats in stock at the end of the day, we need to subtract the number of hats sold from the initial stock.
999 - 759 = 240
### Answer: 240

Expected answer: 240

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A watchmaker has 472 silver watches in stock and he recently received a new shipment of 493 gold watches. How many watches does he now have in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) The watchmaker has 472 silver watches in stock.
2) He recently received a new shipment of 493 gold watches.
3) To find the total number of watches, we add the silver and gold watches together:
472 silver watches + 493 gold watches = 965 total watches.

### Answer: 965

Expected answer: 965

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The watchmaker sold 339 watches during a big sale. How many watches does he have left in stock after the sale?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down:
1) The watchmaker originally had 965 watches in total (from the previous problem).
2) He sold 339 watches during the big sale.
3) To find the number of watches he has left in stock, we subtract the number of watches sold from the original total:
965 total watches - 339 watches sold = 626 watches left in stock.

### Answer: 626

Expected answer: 626

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the watchmaker initially had 515 gold watches instead of 493. How many watches would he have had in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) The watchmaker initially had 472 silver watches in stock.
2) He recently received a new shipment of 515 gold watches (instead of 493).
3) To find the total number of watches, we add the silver and gold watches together:
472 silver watches + 515 gold watches = 987 total watches.

### Answer: 987

Expected answer: 987

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A TV network has 294 scheduled ads to play throughout the day. Then, they receive a request to play an extra 78 ads. How many ads in total will be played on the TV network?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The TV network has 294 scheduled ads to play throughout the day.
2) They then receive a request to play an extra 78 ads.
3) To find the total number of ads that will be played, we add the original 294 ads to the extra 78 ads:
294 + 78 = 372

### Answer: 372

Expected answer: 372

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Now, the TV network decides to double the total number of ads that they played, including both the scheduled and extra ads. How many ads will be played on the TV network in total now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:
1) The original total number of ads was 372 (294 scheduled + 78 extra)
2) The TV network decides to double the total number of ads
3) To double the total, we multiply 372 by 2:
372 x 2 = 744

### Answer: 744

Expected answer: 744

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead, the TV network had initially scheduled only 157 ads. They still receive a request to play an extra 78 ads. With this change, how many ads in total will now be played on the TV network?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
1) The TV network initially had 157 scheduled ads.
2) They then received a request to play an extra 78 ads.
3) To find the total number of ads that will be played, we add the original 157 ads to the extra 78 ads:
157 + 78 = 235

### Answer: 235

Expected answer: 235

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In an observatory, there are 682 functional telescopes. After a month, 391 telescopes were found to be non-functional. How many telescopes remained functional after a month?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The total number of telescopes in the observatory is 682.
After a month, 391 telescopes were found to be non-functional.
To find the number of telescopes that remained functional, we need to subtract the number of non-functional telescopes from the total number of telescopes.
682 - 391 = <<682 - 391 = 291>>291 telescopes remained functional after a month.

### Answer: 291

Expected answer: 291

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After a month of maintenance, 622 non-functional telescopes in the observatory were repaired and brought back to functionality. How many functional telescopes does the observatory have now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 682 functional telescopes in the observatory.
After a month, 391 telescopes were found to be non-functional, leaving 682 - 391 = 291 functional telescopes.
After the maintenance, 622 non-functional telescopes were repaired and brought back to functionality.
To find the total number of functional telescopes now, we need to add the number of functional telescopes that remained after the first month and the number of repaired telescopes.
291 + 622 = <<291 + 622 = 913>>913 functional telescopes in the observatory now.

### Answer: 913

Expected answer: 913

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that the observatory initially had 987 functional telescopes, instead of 682. After a month, 391 telescopes were found to be non-functional. How many functional telescopes would there be in such a scenario?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The initial number of functional telescopes in the observatory is 987.
After a month, 391 telescopes were found to be non-functional.
To find the number of functional telescopes remaining, we need to subtract the number of non-functional telescopes from the initial number of functional telescopes.
987 - 391 = <<987 - 391 = 596>>596 functional telescopes would remain after a month.

### Answer: 596

Expected answer: 596

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer harvests 874 grapes from his farm. After selling some of the grapes at a local market, he has 748 left. How many grapes did the farmer sell at the market?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The farmer harvested 874 grapes from his farm
* After selling some at the market, he had 748 grapes left
* To find how many grapes he sold at the market, we need to subtract the number of grapes he had left (748) from the total number of grapes he harvested (874)

874 grapes harvested - 748 grapes left = 126 grapes sold at the market

### Answer: 126

Expected answer: 126

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Previously, the farmer had sold a certain amount of grapes. Let's consider a different scenario where he had 874 grapes to begin with, but after selling some at the local market, he had 802 left instead. In this case, how many grapes did the farmer sell at the market?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* The farmer had 874 grapes to begin with
* After selling some at the local market, he had 802 grapes left
* To find how many grapes he sold at the market, we need to subtract the number of grapes he had left (802) from the total number of grapes he had (874)

874 grapes - 802 grapes left = 72 grapes sold at the market

### Answer: 72

Expected answer: 72

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A carpenter manufactures 919 dining room tables. Unfortunately, 2 of them become damaged and are unsaleable. How many good tables does the carpenter have to sell?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The carpenter originally manufactured 919 dining room tables.
However, 2 of them became damaged and were unsaleable.
To find the number of good tables the carpenter has to sell, we need to subtract the number of damaged tables from the total number of tables manufactured.
919 - 2 = 917 good tables.

### Answer: 917

Expected answer: 917

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The carpenter sold 196 of the good dining room tables in the first month. How many good tables does the carpenter have left to sell?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The carpenter originally had 917 good dining room tables to sell.
In the first month, the carpenter sold 196 of the good tables.
To find the number of good tables the carpenter has left to sell, we need to subtract the number of tables sold from the total number of good tables.
917 - 196 = 721 good tables left to sell.

### Answer: 721

Expected answer: 721

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a particular paragraph, John found 52 word repetitions. Later, he realized that he made a mistake and he actually counted only half of them. What is the total number of word repetitions he should have counted in that paragraph?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
* John initially found 52 word repetitions in the paragraph.
* However, he later realized that he had only counted half of the actual word repetitions.
* To find the total number of word repetitions he should have counted, we need to double the initial count.

Total number of word repetitions = 52 x 2 = <<52 x 2 = 104>>104

### Answer: 104

Expected answer: 104

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After correctly counting all repetitions, John found that the paragraph originally had 318 words. With his new calculation of the number of word repetitions, how many unique words are there in the paragraph?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
* The paragraph originally had 318 words.
* John found that the total number of word repetitions in the paragraph is 104.
* To find the number of unique words, we need to subtract the number of word repetitions from the total number of words.

Number of unique words = Total words - Total word repetitions
Number of unique words = 318 - 104 = <<318 - 104 = 214>>214

### Answer: 214

Expected answer: 214

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After revisiting the paragraph, John realized that he initially miscounted the word repetitions. It turns out there were actually 64 word repetitions, not 52. He again counted this twice to be sure. What is John's new total count of word repetitions in the paragraph?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
* John initially miscounted the word repetitions and found 52 instead of the actual 64.
* He then realized his mistake and counted the word repetitions again, this time finding the correct number of 64.
* To be sure, he counted the 64 word repetitions twice.

Total number of word repetitions = 64 x 2 = <<64 x 2 = 128>>128

### Answer: 128

Expected answer: 128

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a forest, there were originally 536 trees. However, after a massive storm, 176 trees were uprooted and destroyed. How many trees are remaining in the forest after the storm?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The original number of trees in the forest was 536.
After the storm, 176 trees were uprooted and destroyed.
To find the number of trees remaining, we need to subtract the number of trees destroyed from the original number of trees.
536 - 176 = <<536 - 176 = 360>>360 trees remaining in the forest after the storm.

### Answer: 360

Expected answer: 360

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the initial count, the forest had 183 trees before the massive storm, not 536. If the massive storm still uprooted and destroyed 176 trees, how many trees would be remaining in the forest?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* The initial count showed there were 183 trees in the forest
* After the massive storm, 176 trees were uprooted and destroyed
* To find the number of trees remaining, we need to subtract the number of trees destroyed from the initial number of trees

Calculation:
* Initial number of trees: 183
* Number of trees destroyed: 176
* Number of trees remaining: 183 - 176 = <<183 - 176 = 7>>7

### Answer: 7

Expected answer: 7

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At a party, there are 257 adults and 363 children. How many total people attended the party?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The total number of people at the party is the sum of the number of adults and the number of children.
The number of adults is 257.
The number of children is 363.
Therefore, the total number of people at the party is 257 + 363 = 620.

### Answer: 620

Expected answer: 620

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: At a party, there are 257 adults and 363 children, making a total of people. Later, 461 people leave the party early. How many people are left at the party?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) There are 257 adults and 363 children at the party, for a total of 257 + 363 = 620 people.
2) Later, 461 people leave the party early.
3) To find the number of people left at the party, we take the total number of people (620) and subtract the number of people who left (461).
4) 620 - 461 = 159

### Answer: 159

Expected answer: 159

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: If at the party, there were originally 144 adults instead of 257 and the same number of children, 363, how many total people would have attended the party?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

* Originally, there were 257 adults and 363 children at the party.
* The total number of people at the party was 257 + 363 = 620.

Now, the question is asking what the total number of people would have been if there were originally 144 adults instead of 257, but the same number of children (363).

Reasoning:
* The number of adults is now 144 instead of 257.
* The number of children is still 363.
* The total number of people would be 144 + 363 = 507.

### Answer: 507

Expected answer: 507

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At Lucy's birthday party, there are 58 children. After a while, 156 adults join the party. How many people are at Lucy's birthday party in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There are 58 children at the party initially
* Then, 156 adults join the party
* To find the total number of people at the party, we add the number of children and the number of adults:
* 58 children + 156 adults = <<58 + 156 = 214>>214 people in total

### Answer: 214

Expected answer: 214

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Lucy's twin Michael throws a party on the same day. Surprisingly, the same number of children and adults attend his birthday as attended Lucy's party. How many people attend both parties in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's think this through:
* At Lucy's party, there were 58 children and 156 adults, for a total of 214 people
* At Michael's party, the same number of children and adults attended as at Lucy's party
* So at Michael's party, there were also 58 children and 156 adults, for a total of 214 people

To find the total number of people attending both parties, we add the totals for each party:
* 214 people at Lucy's party + 214 people at Michael's party = <<214 + 214 = 428>>428 people in total

### Answer: 428

Expected answer: 428

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Lucy and Michael's younger brother Johnny also has a party on the same day. However, at his party, there are 58 children just like at Lucy's party, but only 14 adults. How many people total attend Johnny's party?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Alright, let's solve this step-by-step:
* At Johnny's party, there are 58 children
* And there are 14 adults
* To find the total number of people at Johnny's party, we add the number of children and the number of adults:
* 58 children + 14 adults = <<58 + 14 = 72>>72 people in total

### Answer: 72

Expected answer: 72

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A furniture factory produces 90 single beds in a day. It produces 647 more double beds than single beds on the same day. How many double beds did the furniture factory produce?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The furniture factory produces 90 single beds in a day
* It produces 647 more double beds than single beds on the same day

To find the number of double beds produced, we need to add 647 to the number of single beds produced:
* Number of double beds = 90 + 647 = 737

### Answer: 737

Expected answer: 737

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that the furniture factory originally produced only 21 single beds in a day, but still produced 647 more double beds than single beds. How many double beds did they manufacture now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:
* Originally, the furniture factory produced 21 single beds in a day
* They still produced 647 more double beds than single beds

To find the number of double beds produced, we need to add 647 to the number of single beds produced:
* Number of double beds = 21 + 647 = 668

### Answer: 668

Expected answer: 668

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A camera company has 202 professional cameras in stock. Later, 113 cameras are sold. How many professional cameras is the company left with?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The camera company initially had 202 professional cameras in stock.
2) Later, 113 cameras were sold.
3) To find the number of professional cameras the company is left with, we need to subtract the number of cameras sold from the initial number of cameras in stock.
4) 202 - 113 = 89

### Answer: 89

Expected answer: 89

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In addition to professional cameras, the camera company also has 70 amateur cameras in stock. After selling 113 professional cameras, how many cameras (professional and amateur) is the company left with in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
1) The camera company initially had 202 professional cameras in stock.
2) They sold 113 professional cameras.
3) So the number of professional cameras left is 202 - 113 = 89.
4) In addition, the company had 70 amateur cameras in stock.
5) To find the total number of cameras (professional and amateur) left, we add the number of professional cameras (89) and the number of amateur cameras (70).
6) 89 + 70 = 159

### Answer: 159

Expected answer: 159

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the scenario that instead of initially having 202 professional cameras, the company actually started with 966 professional cameras. After selling 113 professional cameras, how many professional cameras would the company be left with then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

1) The camera company initially had 966 professional cameras in stock.
2) Later, 113 cameras were sold.
3) To find the number of professional cameras the company is left with, we need to subtract the number of cameras sold from the initial number of cameras in stock.
4) 966 - 113 = 853

### Answer: 853

Expected answer: 853

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A jeweler had 986 grams of gold earlier today. Throughout the day he used 29 grams of gold to make some rings. How many grams of gold does he have left?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The jeweler had 986 grams of gold earlier today.
He used 29 grams of gold to make some rings.
To find the amount of gold he has left, we need to subtract the amount of gold he used from the total amount of gold he had.

986 grams - 29 grams = <<986 - 29 = 957>>957 grams

### Answer: 957 grams

Expected answer: 957

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After using 29 grams of gold to make some rings, the jeweler decided to use another 535 grams to make more intricate necklaces. How much gold does he have left now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) The jeweler originally had 986 grams of gold.
2) He used 29 grams to make some rings.
   * So after the first use, he had 986 - 29 = 957 grams of gold left.
3) He then used another 535 grams to make more intricate necklaces.
   * So after the second use, he had 957 - 535 = <<957 - 535 = 422>> 422 grams of gold left.

### Answer: 422 grams

Expected answer: 422

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A UFO researcher has tracked 701 UFO sightings in the Western Hemisphere. On one particular night, they observe 8 additional sightings. How many UFO sightings has the researcher tracked in total after that particular night?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The researcher had tracked 701 UFO sightings in the Western Hemisphere before the particular night.
On that particular night, they observed 8 additional sightings.
To find the total number of UFO sightings tracked by the researcher, we need to add the 8 additional sightings to the original 701 sightings.

701 + 8 = <<701 + 8 = 709>>709

### Answer: 709

Expected answer: 709

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the night when the UFO researcher logged 8 additional sightings to the original 701, they start to make a more detailed report. As they are reviewing the sightings one by one, they find that 663 of them can be explained by known phenomena. How many potential UFO sightings remain unexplained after taking into account these known explanations?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1. The researcher originally had 701 UFO sightings tracked.
2. On a particular night, they observed 8 additional sightings, bringing the total to 701 + 8 = 709 sightings.
3. After reviewing the sightings, they found that 663 of them could be explained by known phenomena.

To find the number of potential UFO sightings that remain unexplained, we need to subtract the 663 sightings that were explained from the total 709 sightings.

709 - 663 = <<709 - 663 = 46>>46

### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Reconsidering the original report, suppose the UFO researcher initially only tracked 444 sightings in the Western Hemisphere. After observing 8 additional sightings in one night, how many UFO sightings has the researcher tracked in total after that particular night?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

Reasoning:
The researcher had initially tracked 444 UFO sightings in the Western Hemisphere.
On the particular night, they observed 8 additional sightings.
To find the total number of UFO sightings tracked by the researcher, we need to add the 8 additional sightings to the original 444 sightings.

444 + 8 = <<444 + 8 = 452>>452

### Answer: 452

Expected answer: 452

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a remote galaxy, there are 67 stars which have planets around them. Apart from these, there are 244 stars which do not have any planets. How many stars are there in total in that galaxy?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There are 67 stars that have planets around them
* There are 244 stars that do not have any planets

To find the total number of stars in the galaxy, we need to add these two numbers together:
* Total stars = 67 + 244 = 311

### Answer: 311

Expected answer: 311

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the stars in a remote galaxy, there are 196 stars in a nearby galaxy. Including the 67 stars with planets and the 244 stars without planets from the remote galaxy, how many stars are there across both galaxies in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

We know the following:
* In the remote galaxy, there are 67 stars with planets and 244 stars without planets
* In the nearby galaxy, there are 196 stars

To find the total number of stars across both galaxies, we need to add up all the stars:
* Stars in remote galaxy with planets: 67
* Stars in remote galaxy without planets: 244
* Stars in nearby galaxy: 196

Total stars = 67 + 244 + 196 = 507

### Answer: 507

Expected answer: 507

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In retrospect, the astronomers realized they had made a slight mistake. Instead of 67 planets with stars, they realized there were actually 192 stars with planets. So, including the 244 stars without planets in the remote galaxy, how many stars are there now in that galaxy?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's update the information:
* There are 192 stars that have planets around them
* There are 244 stars that do not have any planets

To find the total number of stars in the galaxy, we need to add these two numbers together:
* Total stars = 192 + 244 = 436

### Answer: 436

Expected answer: 436

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a warehouse, there are 415 boxes of bananas. Another shipment arrives and brings in additional 216 boxes. How many boxes of bananas are there in the warehouse now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 415 boxes of bananas in the warehouse.
* A new shipment arrived and brought in an additional 216 boxes.
* To find the total number of boxes in the warehouse now, we add the initial 415 boxes and the additional 216 boxes:
* 415 + 216 = 631 boxes

### Answer: 631

Expected answer: 631

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the shipment arrives, 858 boxes of bananas are expected for an upcoming festival. How many boxes of bananas are still needed to meet the festival requirements?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 415 boxes of bananas in the warehouse.
* A new shipment arrived and brought in an additional 216 boxes.
* So the total number of boxes in the warehouse now is 415 + 216 = 631 boxes.
* The expected number of boxes needed for the upcoming festival is 858 boxes.
* To find how many more boxes are still needed, we subtract the current number of boxes (631) from the expected number of boxes (858):
* 858 - 631 = 227 boxes

### Answer: 227

Expected answer: 227

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After considering the warehouse's capacity, it is realized that the warehouse had originally 347 boxes of bananas, not 415. After the shipment of additional 216 boxes, how many boxes of bananas are there in the warehouse now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 347 boxes of bananas in the warehouse.
* A new shipment arrived and brought in an additional 216 boxes.
* To find the total number of boxes in the warehouse now, we add the initial 347 boxes and the additional 216 boxes:
* 347 + 216 = 563 boxes

### Answer: 563

Expected answer: 563

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a particular galaxy, there are 373 known stars. Recently, astronomers discovered 540 more stars in that galaxy. How many stars are now known to exist in that galaxy?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 373 known stars in the galaxy.
Astronomers recently discovered 540 more stars.
To find the total number of stars now known to exist in the galaxy, we need to add the initial number of known stars and the newly discovered stars.

Total number of stars = Initial known stars + Newly discovered stars
Total number of stars = 373 + 540 = 913

### Answer: 913

Expected answer: 913

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a particular galaxy, there are 373 known stars. Recently, astronomers discovered 540 more stars in that galaxy. However, after careful review, they found that 153 of these stars were already accounted for in previous observations. How many stars are now known to exist in this galaxy after eliminating the repeated observations?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 373 known stars in the galaxy.
Astronomers recently discovered 540 more stars.
However, 153 of these newly discovered stars were already accounted for in previous observations.
To find the total number of stars now known to exist in the galaxy, we need to subtract the repeated observations from the newly discovered stars and then add the result to the initial known stars.

Newly discovered stars = 540
Repeated observations = 153
Stars not previously accounted for = 540 - 153 = 387

Total number of stars = Initial known stars + Stars not previously accounted for
Total number of stars = 373 + 387 = 760

### Answer: 760

Expected answer: 760

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the same galaxy, after further examination, astronomers found that they made a mistake in their initial count and there are actually 443 known stars, not 373. They also discovered 540 more stars as mentioned earlier. How many stars are now known to exist in that galaxy with the updated initial count?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

1. The initial known stars in the galaxy was 443, not 373 as previously stated.
2. Astronomers recently discovered 540 more stars.

To find the total number of stars now known to exist in the galaxy, we need to add the updated initial known stars and the newly discovered stars.

Total number of stars = Updated initial known stars + Newly discovered stars
Total number of stars = 443 + 540 = 983

### Answer: 983

Expected answer: 983

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At a dairy farm, there are 177 cows. The farmer sold 71 of them to another farmer. How many cows are currently at the dairy farm?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Initially, there were 177 cows at the dairy farm.
* The farmer sold 71 cows to another farmer.
* To find the number of cows currently at the dairy farm, we need to subtract the number of cows sold from the initial number of cows.
* 177 cows - 71 cows sold = <<177 - 71 = 106>>106 cows currently at the dairy farm.

### Answer: 106

Expected answer: 106

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose originally, the dairy farm had 218 cows instead of 177. If the farmer still sold 71 of them, how many cows would be left on the farm?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:
* Originally, the dairy farm had 218 cows.
* The farmer sold 71 cows.
* To find the number of cows left on the farm, we need to subtract the number of cows sold from the original number of cows.
* 218 cows - 71 cows sold = <<218 - 71 = 147>>147 cows left on the farm.

### Answer: 147

Expected answer: 147

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: On a farm, there are 178 adult chickens. But this month, an additional 73 chicks hatch. How many total chickens are there on the farm now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* There are 178 adult chickens on the farm
* An additional 73 chicks hatch this month
* To find the total number of chickens on the farm now, we add the adult chickens and the new chicks:
* 178 adult chickens + 73 new chicks = <<178 + 73 = 251>>251 total chickens

### Answer: 251

Expected answer: 251

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: On a farm, there are 178 adult chickens. But this month, an additional 73 chicks hatch. The farm's maximum capacity, though, is 983 chickens. How many more chickens can the farm hold?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* There are 178 adult chickens on the farm
* An additional 73 chicks hatch this month
* So the total number of chickens on the farm now is:
* 178 adult chickens + 73 new chicks = 251 total chickens
* The farm's maximum capacity is 983 chickens
* To find how many more chickens the farm can hold, we subtract the current total from the maximum capacity:
* 983 maximum capacity - 251 current total = <<983 - 251 = 732>>732 more chickens the farm can hold

### Answer: 732

Expected answer: 732

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original word problem on the farm, there were 178 adult chickens. But let's imagine if the farm initially had 435 adult chickens instead, and this month an additional 73 chicks still hatch. Now, how many total chickens are there on the farm?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 435 adult chickens on the farm
* This month, an additional 73 chicks hatched
* To find the total number of chickens on the farm now, we add the adult chickens and the new chicks:
* 435 adult chickens + 73 new chicks = <<435 + 73 = 508>>508 total chickens

### Answer: 508

Expected answer: 508

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There is a huge parking lot with 720 trucks parked. In the afternoon, 88 more trucks parked in the lot. How many trucks are parked in the parking lot in the afternoon?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 720 trucks parked in the lot.
In the afternoon, 88 more trucks parked in the lot.
Therefore, the total number of trucks parked in the lot in the afternoon is:
720 + 88 = 808 trucks.

### Answer: 808

Expected answer: 808

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the trucks initially parked and the ones that arrived in the afternoon, a towing company was called to remove 45 trucks from the parking lot due to various issues. After the towing company did their job, how many trucks are left in the parking lot?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) Initially, there were 720 trucks parked in the lot.
2) In the afternoon, 88 more trucks parked in the lot.
   So the total number of trucks in the lot after the afternoon was: 720 + 88 = 808 trucks.
3) Then, 45 trucks were removed by the towing company.
   So the final number of trucks left in the parking lot is:
   808 - 45 = 763 trucks.

### Answer: 763

Expected answer: 763

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In retrospect, it was found that the initial count of trucks in the parking lot was incorrect and there were actually only 439 trucks to begin with. However, in the afternoon, the same number of 88 trucks still arrived. After this update, how many trucks were there in the parking lot in the afternoon, before the towing company began their job?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

1. The initial count of trucks in the parking lot was incorrect and there were actually only 439 trucks to begin with.
2. In the afternoon, 88 more trucks arrived and parked in the lot.

To find the total number of trucks in the parking lot in the afternoon, we need to add the initial number of trucks (439) and the number of trucks that arrived in the afternoon (88).

439 + 88 = 527 trucks

### Answer: 527

Expected answer: 527

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A mighty wizard cast a spell that produced 484 magical sparks. However, 177 of them disappeared into thin air before reaching their destination. How many magical sparks made it to their destination?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The wizard cast a spell that produced 484 magical sparks.
However, 177 of them disappeared into thin air before reaching their destination.
To find the number of magical sparks that made it to their destination, we need to subtract the number of sparks that disappeared from the total number of sparks produced.
484 - 177 = <<484 - 177 = 307>>307 magical sparks made it to their destination.
### Answer: 307

Expected answer: 307

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that instead of 484 magical sparks, the mighty wizard initially cast a spell that produced 669 magical sparks. However, just as before, 177 of them disappeared into thin air before reaching their destination. In this modification of the scenario, how many magical sparks made it to their destination from the first spell?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In this modified scenario, the wizard cast a spell that produced 669 magical sparks.
However, 177 of them disappeared into thin air before reaching their destination.
To find the number of magical sparks that made it to their destination, we need to subtract the number of sparks that disappeared from the total number of sparks produced.
669 - 177 = <<669 - 177 = 492>>492 magical sparks made it to their destination.
### Answer: 492

Expected answer: 492

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Susan picked 671 bananas from the trees in the morning, and she picked 296 more bananas in the afternoon. How many bananas did Susan pick in total?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the morning, Susan picked 671 bananas
* In the afternoon, Susan picked 296 more bananas
* To find the total number of bananas Susan picked, we add the morning and afternoon amounts:
* 671 + 296 = 967 bananas

### Answer: 967

Expected answer: 967

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Susan picked 671 bananas from the trees in the morning, and she picked 296 more bananas in the afternoon. However, 345 bananas were not ripe enough, so she put them back. How many ripe bananas did Susan end up with?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down:
* In the morning, Susan picked 671 bananas
* In the afternoon, she picked 296 more bananas
* So the total number of bananas she picked was:
  * 671 + 296 = 967 bananas
* However, 345 of those bananas were not ripe enough, so she put them back
* To find the number of ripe bananas she ended up with, we subtract the 345 unripe bananas from the total:
  * 967 - 345 = 622 ripe bananas

### Answer: 622

Expected answer: 622

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, Susan picked 671 bananas in the morning. But what if she had actually picked 232 bananas in the morning and the same 296 bananas in the afternoon? How many bananas would Susan have picked in total, in this case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the morning, Susan picked 232 bananas
* In the afternoon, Susan picked 296 more bananas
* To find the total number of bananas Susan picked, we add the morning and afternoon amounts:
* 232 + 296 = 528 bananas

### Answer: 528

Expected answer: 528

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A candle company produces 369 different types of candles. One day, they decide to create a new set of candles using the same designs but different scents. This doubles their product line. How many types of candles does the company produce now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
* The candle company originally produced 369 different types of candles.
* They decided to create a new set of candles using the same designs but different scents.
* This doubles their product line, meaning they now have twice as many types of candles.
* To calculate the new number of types of candles, we multiply the original number by 2:
* 369 x 2 = <<369 x 2 = 738>>738

### Answer: 738

Expected answer: 738

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After doubling their product line, the candle company decides to innovate further by introducing 159 new types of candles with unique designs and scents. With this addition, how many types of candles does the company produce now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
* Originally, the candle company produced 369 different types of candles.
* They then doubled their product line, resulting in 369 x 2 = 738 types of candles.
* After that, they introduced 159 new types of candles with unique designs and scents.
* To calculate the new total number of types of candles, we add the 159 new candles to the previous total:
* 738 + 159 = <<738 + 159 = 897>>897

### Answer: 897

Expected answer: 897

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: If we go back in time to when the candle company first started innovating and think about a scenario where they initially produced 414 different types of candles instead of 369. Had they still decided to create a new set of candles using the same designs but different scents, doubling their product line as before, how many types of candles would the company produce in this case?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

* The candle company initially produced 414 different types of candles.
* They then decided to create a new set of candles using the same designs but different scents.
* This doubled their product line, meaning they now have twice as many types of candles.
* To calculate the new number of types of candles, we multiply the original number by 2:
* 414 x 2 = <<414 x 2 = 828>>828

### Answer: 828

Expected answer: 828

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: One day, a fisherman catches 406 fish in the morning and then, in the afternoon, he catches an additional 109. How many fish in total did the fisherman catch that day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* In the morning, the fisherman caught 406 fish.
* In the afternoon, the fisherman caught an additional 109 fish.
* To find the total number of fish caught, we add the morning and afternoon catches:
* 406 + 109 = 515 fish.

### Answer: 515

Expected answer: 515

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After catching the 406 fish in the morning and 109 fish in the afternoon, the fisherman then casts his line one more time and manages to catch an additional 189 fish in the evening. How many fish did the fisherman catch in total for the entire day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the morning, the fisherman caught 406 fish.
* In the afternoon, the fisherman caught an additional 109 fish.
* In the evening, the fisherman caught an additional 189 fish.
* To find the total number of fish caught, we add up the catches from each time period:
* 406 + 109 + 189 = 704 fish.

### Answer: 704

Expected answer: 704

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous problem, the fisherman initially caught 406 fish in the morning. But what if he only managed to catch 349 fish during the morning instead? If he still caught 109 fish in the afternoon, how many fish did he catch in total then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:
* In the morning, the fisherman caught 349 fish.
* In the afternoon, the fisherman caught an additional 109 fish.
* To find the total number of fish caught, we add the morning and afternoon catches:
* 349 + 109 = 458 fish.

### Answer: 458

Expected answer: 458

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A skateboard store sold 603 skateboards in October. In November, they sold 298 fewer skateboards than in October. How many skateboards did the skateboard store sell in November?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* The skateboard store sold 603 skateboards in October.
* In November, they sold 298 fewer skateboards than in October.

To find the number of skateboards sold in November, we need to subtract 298 from the number sold in October:
* 603 - 298 = 305

Therefore, the skateboard store sold 305 skateboards in November.

### Answer: 305

Expected answer: 305

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous scenario, after November, two additional skateboards were returned to the skateboard store due to defects. After these returns, how many skateboards has the store actually sold in November?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* In the previous problem, we determined that the skateboard store sold 305 skateboards in November.
* Now, we are told that 2 additional skateboards were returned to the store due to defects.

To find the actual number of skateboards sold in November, we need to subtract the 2 returned skateboards from the 305 sold:
* 305 - 2 = 303

Therefore, the skateboard store has actually sold 303 skateboards in November.

### Answer: 303

Expected answer: 303

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Based on the previous scenarios, if the skateboard store had initially sold 457 fewer skateboards in October, instead of 298 fewer, how many skateboards would the store have sold in November then?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out:

* In the previous scenario, the skateboard store sold 603 skateboards in October.
* In November, they sold 298 fewer skateboards than in October.
* So the number of skateboards sold in November was 603 - 298 = 305.

Now, in this new scenario:
* The skateboard store sold 457 fewer skateboards in October, instead of 298 fewer.
* So the number of skateboards sold in October would be 603 - 457 = 146.
* Then in November, they would have sold 146 - 298 = -152 skateboards.

However, it doesn't make sense to have a negative number of skateboards sold. So in this new scenario, the skateboard store would have sold 0 skateboards in November.

### Answer: 0

Expected answer: 146

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a certain year, NASA sends 459 astronauts into space. In the same year, other space agencies from around the world combined send an additional 281 astronauts. How many astronauts were sent into space in total that year?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
NASA sent 459 astronauts into space.
Other space agencies from around the world combined sent an additional 281 astronauts.
To find the total number of astronauts sent into space that year, we need to add the number of astronauts sent by NASA and the number of astronauts sent by other space agencies.
459 + 281 = 740 astronauts.

### Answer: 740

Expected answer: 740

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a certain year, NASA sends 459 astronauts into space. In the same year, other space agencies around the world combined send an additional 281 astronauts. Later that year, a global collaboration initiative sends an additional 194 astronauts into space. How many astronauts were sent into space in total that year?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
1) NASA sent 459 astronauts into space.
2) Other space agencies around the world combined sent an additional 281 astronauts.
3) Later that year, a global collaboration initiative sent an additional 194 astronauts into space.

To find the total number of astronauts sent into space that year, we need to add up all these numbers:
459 + 281 + 194 = 934 astronauts.

### Answer: 934

Expected answer: 934

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, consider if NASA had been able to send only 422 astronauts into space, while the other space agencies still sent an additional 281 astronauts. How many astronauts in total would have been sent into space that year?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
NASA sent 422 astronauts into space.
Other space agencies from around the world combined sent an additional 281 astronauts.
To find the total number of astronauts sent into space that year, we need to add the number of astronauts sent by NASA and the number of astronauts sent by other space agencies.
422 + 281 = 703 astronauts.

### Answer: 703

Expected answer: 703

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A team of firefighters save 472 people from a burning building. In a separate incident later that same day, they save an additional 93 people from a different fire. How many people in total did the firefighters save that day?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the first incident, the firefighters saved 472 people.
In the second incident, the firefighters saved an additional 93 people.
To find the total number of people saved, we add the two numbers together:
472 + 93 = 565

### Answer: 565

Expected answer: 565

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the firefighters saved 472 people from a burning building and saved an additional 93 people from a different fire, sadly 114 people were considered as lost at the end of the day. How many people were effectively saved by the firefighters?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
In the first incident, the firefighters saved 472 people.
In the second incident, the firefighters saved an additional 93 people.
The total number of people saved is 472 + 93 = 565.
However, 114 people were considered lost at the end of the day.
To find the number of people effectively saved, we subtract the number of lost people from the total number of people saved:
565 - 114 = 451

### Answer: 451

Expected answer: 451

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After carefully reviewing their records, the firefighters realized that their first count was wrong. Instead of 472 people, they had actually saved 60 people from the first fire. They still saved an additional 93 people from the second fire. How many people in total did the firefighters actually save?

Claude-3 Haiku:

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

1. In the first incident, the firefighters saved 60 people, not 472 as originally reported.
2. In the second incident, the firefighters saved an additional 93 people.

To find the total number of people saved, we add the two numbers together:

60 + 93 = 153

### Answer: 153

Expected answer: 153

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Jack is a professional mountain climber. He has a rope that is 623 meters long. He buys an additional rope to make sure he is prepared for any situation. The total length of both ropes is 377 meters more than the length of the first rope. What is the total length of the two ropes?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Jack has a rope that is 623 meters long
* He buys an additional rope
* The total length of both ropes is 377 meters more than the length of the first rope

To find the total length of the two ropes, we need to:
1. Calculate the length of the additional rope
2. Add the length of the first rope and the additional rope

Step 1: Calculate the length of the additional rope
* The total length of both ropes is 377 meters more than the length of the first rope
* So the length of the additional rope is 377 meters

Step 2: Add the length of the first rope and the additional rope
* Length of first rope: 623 meters
* Length of additional rope: 377 meters
* Total length of both ropes: 623 + 377 = 1000 meters

### Answer: 1000 meters

Expected answer: 1000

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Considering that Jack is a professional mountain climber, he uses 623 meters of his rope on a massive mountain. He then buys an additional rope, ending up with a total length of 377 meters more than the length of the first rope. However, due to unforeseen circumstances, Jack has to use 675 meters of the combined length of rope in a rescue mission. How much length of rope does Jack have left now?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's break this down step-by-step:
* Jack originally had a rope that was 623 meters long
* He bought an additional rope, and the total length of both ropes was 377 meters more than the length of the first rope
* So the total length of both ropes is 623 + 377 = 1000 meters
* Jack then used 675 meters of the combined length of rope in a rescue mission

To find the length of rope Jack has left, we need to:
1. Calculate the total length of rope Jack had
2. Subtract the amount of rope he used in the rescue mission

Step 1: Calculate the total length of rope Jack had
* Total length of both ropes: 1000 meters

Step 2: Subtract the amount of rope he used in the rescue mission
* Amount of rope used in rescue mission: 675 meters
* Rope left: 1000 - 675 = 325 meters

### Answer: 325 meters

Expected answer: 325

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Now, let's change the scenario a bit. Suppose originally, Jack had a shorter rope that was 472 meters long. Like before, he buys an additional rope, making the total length of both ropes 377 meters more than the length of the first rope. What is the total length of the two ropes in this situation?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work through this step-by-step:
* Originally, Jack had a rope that was 472 meters long
* He buys an additional rope
* The total length of both ropes is 377 meters more than the length of the first rope

To find the total length of the two ropes, we need to:
1. Calculate the length of the additional rope
2. Add the length of the first rope and the additional rope

Step 1: Calculate the length of the additional rope
* The total length of both ropes is 377 meters more than the length of the first rope
* So the length of the additional rope is 377 meters

Step 2: Add the length of the first rope and the additional rope
* Length of first rope: 472 meters
* Length of additional rope: 377 meters
* Total length of both ropes: 472 + 377 = 849 meters

### Answer: 849 meters

Expected answer: 849

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A kite festival had 577 kites in the sky at its peak. After some time, 256 kites were taken down. How many kites remained in the sky?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
The kite festival had 577 kites in the sky at its peak.
After some time, 256 kites were taken down.
To find the number of kites that remained in the sky, we need to subtract the number of kites taken down from the total number of kites in the sky.
577 - 256 = <<577 - 256 = 321>>321 kites remained in the sky.

### Answer: 321

Expected answer: 321

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the kite festival, the organizers brought an additional 316 kites to add to the ones that remained in the sky. How many kites were there in total after the organizers finished adding the additional kites?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Reasoning:
Initially, there were 577 kites in the sky.
Then, 256 kites were taken down, leaving 577 - 256 = 321 kites in the sky.
After that, the organizers brought an additional 316 kites to add to the ones that remained in the sky.
To find the total number of kites after the additional kites were added, we need to add the number of remaining kites and the additional kites.
321 + 316 = <<321 + 316 = 637>>637 kites in total after the organizers finished adding the additional kites.

### Answer: 637

Expected answer: 637

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's say originally, there were actually 855 kites in the sky at the beginning of the kite festival instead of 577. After the same number of 256 kites were taken down, how many kites would have remained in the sky?

Claude-3 Haiku:

Okay, let's work this out step-by-step:
* Originally, there were 855 kites in the sky at the beginning of the kite festival.
* After some time, 256 kites were taken down.
* To find the number of kites that remained in the sky, we need to subtract the number of kites taken down from the total number of kites in the sky.
* 855 - 256 = <<855 - 256 = 599>>599 kites remained in the sky.

### Answer: 599

Expected answer: 599

Correct? Yes