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Claude-3 Sonnet on 3.NBT.A.2

Common Core Standard 3.NBT.A.2

This standard covers the following:

Fluently add and subtract within 1000 using strategies and algorithms based on place value, properties of operations, and/or the relationship between addition and subtraction.

🔗 Problem

Problem: A tech store had 130 computers in stock. They received a new shipment of 643 computers. How many computers does the store have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of computers the store has after receiving the new shipment.

Given information:
- The tech store initially had 130 computers in stock.
- The store received a new shipment of 643 computers.

To find the total number of computers, we need to add the initial stock and the new shipment.

Total number of computers = Initial stock + New shipment
Total number of computers = 130 + 643
Total number of computers = 773

Therefore, after receiving the new shipment, the tech store now has 773 computers.

### Answer: 773

Expected answer: 773

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the purchase rush, 186 computers were sold. How many computers does the tech store have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of computers remaining after the purchase rush.

Given information:
- The tech store initially had 130 computers in stock.
- The store received a new shipment of 643 computers.
- After the new shipment, the store had a total of 773 computers.
- During the purchase rush, 186 computers were sold.

To find the number of computers remaining, we need to subtract the number of computers sold from the total number of computers the store had.

Number of computers remaining = Total number of computers - Number of computers sold
Number of computers remaining = 773 - 186
Number of computers remaining = 587

Therefore, after the purchase rush, the tech store has 587 computers left.

### Answer: 587

Expected answer: 587

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the receipt of the last shipment, an additional 737 computers, instead of 643, were received by the tech store. How many computers would the store have had in that case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the total number of computers with the updated information.

Given information:
- The tech store initially had 130 computers in stock.
- Instead of receiving 643 computers, the store received an additional 737 computers.

To find the new total number of computers, we need to add the initial stock and the new shipment of 737 computers.

Total number of computers = Initial stock + New shipment
Total number of computers = 130 + 737
Total number of computers = 867

Therefore, if the tech store received an additional shipment of 737 computers instead of 643, the store would have had 867 computers in total.

### Answer: 867

Expected answer: 867

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: For a big party, 645 guests have already confirmed their attendance. An additional 24 guests also decided to join at the last minute. How many guests are expected to attend the party?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of guests who have already confirmed their attendance and the additional guests who decided to join at the last minute.

Given information:
- 645 guests have already confirmed their attendance.
- An additional 24 guests decided to join at the last minute.

Step 1: Add the number of guests who have already confirmed their attendance and the additional guests.
Number of guests expected to attend the party = Guests who have confirmed + Additional guests
Number of guests expected to attend the party = 645 + 24
Number of guests expected to attend the party = 669

Therefore, 669 guests are expected to attend the party.

### Answer: 669

Expected answer: 669

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose for a different big party, there were initially 830 guests who confirmed their attendance. An additional 24 guests also decided to join at the last minute. How many guests are now expected to attend this different event?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of guests who initially confirmed their attendance and the additional guests who decided to join at the last minute.

Given information:
- Initially, 830 guests confirmed their attendance.
- An additional 24 guests decided to join at the last minute.

Step 1: Add the number of guests who initially confirmed their attendance and the additional guests.
Number of guests expected to attend the party = Guests who initially confirmed + Additional guests
Number of guests expected to attend the party = 830 + 24
Number of guests expected to attend the party = 854

Therefore, 854 guests are now expected to attend this different event.

### Answer: 854

Expected answer: 854

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the morning, Joe used 393 milliliters of toothpaste and later, he decided to use another 397 milliliters of toothpaste. How many milliliters of toothpaste did Joe use in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amount of toothpaste Joe used in the morning and the amount he used later.

Given information:
- In the morning, Joe used 393 milliliters of toothpaste.
- Later, Joe used 397 milliliters of toothpaste.

Step 1: Add the two amounts of toothpaste used.
Total amount of toothpaste used = Amount used in the morning + Amount used later
Total amount of toothpaste used = 393 milliliters + 397 milliliters
Total amount of toothpaste used = 790 milliliters

Therefore, Joe used a total of 790 milliliters of toothpaste.

### Answer: 790

Expected answer: 790

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Joe noticed that he used too much toothpaste this morning. He decided to save a bit more toothpaste for the next day. By the end of the day, he managed to save 172 milliliters of toothpaste. How many milliliters of toothpaste did Joe end up using for the day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total amount of toothpaste Joe used and the amount he saved for the next day.

Given information:
- Joe used a total of 790 milliliters of toothpaste for the day.
- Joe saved 172 milliliters of toothpaste for the next day.

Step 1: Subtract the amount of toothpaste saved from the total amount used.
Amount of toothpaste used for the day = Total amount used - Amount saved
Amount of toothpaste used for the day = 790 milliliters - 172 milliliters
Amount of toothpaste used for the day = 618 milliliters

Therefore, Joe ended up using 618 milliliters of toothpaste for the day.

### Answer: 618

Expected answer: 618

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Baker Bob starts the day with 747 cookies in his bakery. However, throughout the morning, he sells 382 cookies. How many cookies does Bob have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the number of cookies Bob started with and the number of cookies he sold.

Given information:
- Bob starts the day with 747 cookies.
- Bob sells 382 cookies throughout the morning.

Step 1: Find the number of cookies Bob has left.
Number of cookies left = Number of cookies at the start - Number of cookies sold
Number of cookies left = 747 - 382
Number of cookies left = 365

Therefore, Bob has 365 cookies left in his bakery.

### Answer: 365

Expected answer: 365

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Baker Bob starts the day with 747 cookies in his bakery. However, throughout the morning, he sells 382 cookies. In the afternoon, a school group comes and buys 33 more cookies. How many cookies does Bob have left after the school group's purchase?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of cookies Bob has left after selling cookies in the morning and to the school group in the afternoon.

Given information:
- Bob starts the day with 747 cookies.
- Bob sells 382 cookies in the morning.
- A school group buys 33 cookies in the afternoon.

Step 1: Find the number of cookies Bob has left after selling cookies in the morning.
Number of cookies left after the morning = Number of cookies at the start - Number of cookies sold in the morning
Number of cookies left after the morning = 747 - 382 = 365

Step 2: Find the number of cookies Bob has left after the school group's purchase.
Number of cookies left after the school group's purchase = Number of cookies left after the morning - Number of cookies sold to the school group
Number of cookies left after the school group's purchase = 365 - 33 = 332

Therefore, Bob has 332 cookies left in his bakery after the school group's purchase.

### Answer: 332

Expected answer: 332

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Baker Bob had a really busy day. What if he had started with fewer cookies in the bakery, say 747 cookies instead of 747? If he had sold 711 cookies throughout the day, how many cookies would he have left then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:

Given information:
- Bob started with 747 cookies in the bakery.
- Bob sold 711 cookies throughout the day.

To find the number of cookies left, we need to subtract the number of cookies sold from the number of cookies he started with.

Step 1: Find the number of cookies left.
Number of cookies left = Number of cookies at the start - Number of cookies sold
Number of cookies left = 747 - 711
Number of cookies left = 36

Therefore, if Bob had started with 747 cookies and sold 711 cookies throughout the day, he would have 36 cookies left in his bakery.

### Answer: 36

Expected answer: 36

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were 27 lemons in a fruit basket. After making some lemonade, 3 lemons were used. How many lemons are left in the basket?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of lemons used from the initial number of lemons in the basket.

Given information:
- There were 27 lemons in the fruit basket initially.
- 3 lemons were used for making lemonade.

Step 1: Subtract the number of lemons used from the initial number of lemons.
Number of lemons left = Initial number of lemons - Number of lemons used
Number of lemons left = 27 - 3
Number of lemons left = 24

Therefore, there are 24 lemons left in the basket after making lemonade.

### Answer: 24

Expected answer: 24

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that originally, there were actually 665 lemons in the basket, not the 27 previously mentioned. After making some lemonade, 3 lemons were used as before. How many lemons would be left in the basket now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- There were originally 665 lemons in the fruit basket.
- 3 lemons were used for making lemonade.

Step 1: Subtract the number of lemons used from the initial number of lemons.
Number of lemons left = Initial number of lemons - Number of lemons used
Number of lemons left = 665 - 3
Number of lemons left = 662

Therefore, with the updated information, there would be 662 lemons left in the basket after making lemonade and using 3 lemons.

### Answer: 662

Expected answer: 662

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Once upon a time, a magical snowman had 384 buttons. He donated 5 buttons to a little squirrel. How many buttons does the snowman have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of buttons the snowman has left after donating 5 buttons to the squirrel.

Given information:
- The snowman initially had 384 buttons.
- The snowman donated 5 buttons to the squirrel.

Step 1: Find the number of buttons the snowman has left.
Number of buttons the snowman had initially - Number of buttons donated = Number of buttons left
384 buttons - 5 buttons = 379 buttons

Therefore, the snowman has 379 buttons left after donating 5 buttons to the squirrel.

### Answer: 379

Expected answer: 379

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After donating 5 buttons to a squirrel, the magical snowman found a hidden treasure of 232 more buttons in the snow. How many buttons does the snowman have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of buttons the snowman has after donating 5 buttons to the squirrel and finding a hidden treasure of 232 more buttons.

Given information:
- The snowman initially had 384 buttons.
- The snowman donated 5 buttons to the squirrel.
- The snowman found a hidden treasure of 232 more buttons.

Step 1: Find the number of buttons the snowman had after donating 5 buttons to the squirrel.
Number of buttons the snowman had initially - Number of buttons donated = Number of buttons left
384 buttons - 5 buttons = 379 buttons

Step 2: Find the total number of buttons the snowman has after finding the hidden treasure.
Number of buttons left + Number of buttons found in the treasure = Total number of buttons
379 buttons + 232 buttons = 611 buttons

Therefore, the snowman has a total of 611 buttons after donating 5 buttons to the squirrel and finding a hidden treasure of 232 more buttons.

### Answer: 611

Expected answer: 611

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In our previous situation, instead of the magical snowman originally having 384 buttons, let's consider he had 861 buttons. After he gave away 5 buttons to the squirrel, how many buttons does he have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The snowman initially had 861 buttons.
- The snowman donated 5 buttons to the squirrel.

Step 1: Find the number of buttons the snowman has left.
Number of buttons the snowman had initially - Number of buttons donated = Number of buttons left
861 buttons - 5 buttons = 856 buttons

Therefore, with the initial number of buttons being 861, and after donating 5 buttons to the squirrel, the snowman has 856 buttons left.

### Answer: 856

Expected answer: 856

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The dictionary you are using has 744 pages. So far, you have read 318 of them. How many pages are left for you to read?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To find the number of pages left to read, we need to subtract the number of pages already read from the total number of pages in the dictionary.

Given information:
- The dictionary has 744 pages.
- You have read 318 pages so far.

Step 1: Subtract the number of pages already read from the total number of pages.
Number of pages left to read = Total number of pages - Number of pages already read
Number of pages left to read = 744 - 318
Number of pages left to read = 426

Therefore, there are 426 pages left for you to read in the dictionary.

### Answer: 426

Expected answer: 426

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reading through the dictionary, you decide to add 120 more pages of advanced vocabulary and jargon. How many pages will the dictionary have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To find the total number of pages the dictionary will have after adding 120 more pages, we need to add the number of pages being added to the original number of pages in the dictionary.

Given information:
- The original dictionary had 744 pages.
- You are adding 120 more pages of advanced vocabulary and jargon.

Step 1: Add the number of pages being added to the original number of pages.
Total number of pages after adding new pages = Original number of pages + Number of pages being added
Total number of pages after adding new pages = 744 + 120
Total number of pages after adding new pages = 864

Therefore, after adding 120 more pages of advanced vocabulary and jargon, the dictionary will have 864 pages.

### Answer: 864

Expected answer: 546

Correct? No

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reconsidering the pages you have read, you realize that the dictionary originally only had 610 pages, not 744. How many pages are left for you to read now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the number of pages left to read with the updated information.

Given information:
- The dictionary originally had 610 pages (not 744).
- You have read 318 pages so far.

Step 1: Subtract the number of pages already read from the total number of pages.
Number of pages left to read = Total number of pages - Number of pages already read
Number of pages left to read = 610 - 318
Number of pages left to read = 292

Therefore, with the updated information that the dictionary originally had 610 pages, there are 292 pages left for you to read.

### Answer: 292

Expected answer: 292

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Bill has a camping store that sells sleeping bags. He just received a new shipment of 69 sleeping bags. If he already had 167 sleeping bags in stock, how many sleeping bags does he have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of sleeping bags Bill has after receiving the new shipment.

Given information:
- Bill received a new shipment of 69 sleeping bags.
- Bill already had 167 sleeping bags in stock.

To find the total number of sleeping bags, we need to add the number of sleeping bags in the new shipment to the number of sleeping bags already in stock.

Total number of sleeping bags = Number of sleeping bags in stock + Number of sleeping bags in the new shipment
Total number of sleeping bags = 167 + 69
Total number of sleeping bags = 236

Therefore, Bill now has 236 sleeping bags in his camping store.

### Answer: 236

Expected answer: 236

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Bill has a camping store that sells sleeping bags. He just received a new shipment of 69 sleeping bags. If he already had 167 sleeping bags in stock, he would have a certain total of sleeping bags. However, in his yearly inventory check, he expected to have 832 sleeping bags in total. After counting the sleeping bags he got from the new shipment and the existing stock, how many sleeping bags are missing from his expected inventory?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find out how many sleeping bags are missing from Bill's expected inventory.

Given:
- Bill received a new shipment of 69 sleeping bags.
- Bill already had 167 sleeping bags in stock.
- Bill expected to have a total of 832 sleeping bags in his inventory.

Step 1: Calculate the total number of sleeping bags Bill has after receiving the new shipment.
Total sleeping bags = Existing stock + New shipment
Total sleeping bags = 167 + 69 = 236

Step 2: Calculate the difference between the expected inventory and the actual inventory.
Sleeping bags missing = Expected inventory - Actual inventory
Sleeping bags missing = 832 - 236 = 596

Therefore, 596 sleeping bags are missing from Bill's expected inventory.

### Answer: 596

Expected answer: 596

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Bill has a camping store that sells sleeping bags. Instead of the previously thought 167 sleeping bags, he realized that he actually had 319 sleeping bags in stock initially. He received a new shipment of 69 sleeping bags. With the new shipment included, how many sleeping bags does he have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of sleeping bags Bill has after receiving the new shipment.

Given information:
- Bill initially had 319 sleeping bags in stock.
- Bill received a new shipment of 69 sleeping bags.

To find the total number of sleeping bags, we need to add the number of sleeping bags in the new shipment to the number of sleeping bags already in stock.

Total number of sleeping bags = Number of sleeping bags in stock + Number of sleeping bags in the new shipment
Total number of sleeping bags = 319 + 69
Total number of sleeping bags = 388

Therefore, with the new shipment included, Bill now has 388 sleeping bags in his camping store.

### Answer: 388

Expected answer: 388

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer has 696 apple trees and he plants an additional 203 apple trees in his orchard. How many apple trees does the farmer have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of apple trees the farmer initially had with the number of additional apple trees he planted.

Given information:
- The farmer initially had 696 apple trees.
- The farmer planted an additional 203 apple trees.

Step 1: Add the number of initial apple trees and the additional apple trees planted.
Number of initial apple trees + Number of additional apple trees planted = Total number of apple trees
696 + 203 = 899

Therefore, the farmer has a total of 899 apple trees in his orchard after planting the additional 203 apple trees.

### Answer: 899

Expected answer: 899

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the same orchard, the farmer decides to clear 188 apple trees for new type of crops. Now, how many apple trees does the farmer have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of apple trees the farmer cleared from the total number of apple trees he had after planting the additional trees.

Given information:
- The farmer initially had 696 apple trees.
- The farmer planted an additional 203 apple trees, making the total 899 apple trees.
- The farmer cleared 188 apple trees for new crops.

Step 1: Find the total number of apple trees after planting the additional trees.
Number of initial apple trees + Number of additional apple trees planted = Total number of apple trees
696 + 203 = 899

Step 2: Subtract the number of apple trees cleared from the total number of apple trees.
Total number of apple trees - Number of apple trees cleared = Number of apple trees left
899 - 188 = 711

Therefore, the farmer has 711 apple trees left in his orchard after clearing 188 apple trees for new crops.

### Answer: 711

Expected answer: 711

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the rainy season, a city had recorded a high water level of 763 millimeters. After a few days of sunshine, the water level decreased by 737 millimeters. What is the current water level in millimeters?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the decrease in water level from the initial high water level.

Given information:
- The initial high water level was 763 millimeters.
- The water level decreased by 737 millimeters.

Step 1: Subtract the decrease in water level from the initial high water level.
Initial high water level - Decrease in water level = Current water level
763 millimeters - 737 millimeters = 26 millimeters

Therefore, the current water level is 26 millimeters.

### Answer: 26

Expected answer: 26

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the rainy season, a city had recorded a high water level of 763 millimeters. After a few days of sunshine, the water level decreased but not by as much as before, this time it went down by 411 millimeters. What is the new water level?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the new water level after the second decrease.

Given information:
- The initial high water level was 763 millimeters.
- After the first decrease, the water level went down by 737 millimeters.
- After the second decrease, the water level went down by 411 millimeters.

Step 1: Find the water level after the first decrease.
Initial high water level - First decrease = Water level after first decrease
763 millimeters - 737 millimeters = 26 millimeters

Step 2: Find the new water level after the second decrease.
Water level after first decrease - Second decrease = New water level
26 millimeters - 411 millimeters = -385 millimeters

Therefore, the new water level is -385 millimeters.

### Answer: -385

Expected answer: 352

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: You had $511 in your wallet. After buying a gift, you now have $378 less. How much money do you have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the amount of money spent on the gift and then subtract it from the initial amount of money in the wallet.

Given information:
- You had $511 in your wallet initially.
- After buying a gift, you have $378 less.

Step 1: Find the amount of money spent on the gift.
Amount of money spent on the gift = $378

Step 2: Subtract the amount spent on the gift from the initial amount of money in the wallet.
Amount of money left = Initial amount of money - Amount spent on the gift
Amount of money left = $511 - $378
Amount of money left = $133

Therefore, after buying the gift, you have $133 left in your wallet.

### Answer: $133

Expected answer: 133

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In continuation from the previous scenario, imagine that you found an extra $614 in another compartment of your wallet. How much money do you have now in your wallet?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's continue from the previous scenario.

Given information:
- After buying the gift, you had $133 left in your wallet.
- You found an extra $614 in another compartment of your wallet.

To find the total amount of money you have now in your wallet, we need to add the amount of money you had left after buying the gift ($133) and the extra money you found ($614).

Step 1: Add the amount of money left after buying the gift and the extra money found.
Total amount of money in your wallet = Amount of money left after buying the gift + Extra money found
Total amount of money in your wallet = $133 + $614
Total amount of money in your wallet = $747

Therefore, after finding the extra $614 in another compartment of your wallet, you now have a total of $747 in your wallet.

### Answer: $747

Expected answer: 747

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Upon recounting, you realize you initially had $529 in your wallet and not $511. After buying the gift you now have $378 less. How much money do you have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the updated initial amount of $529 in your wallet.

Given information:
- You initially had $529 in your wallet.
- After buying the gift, you have $378 less.

Step 1: Find the amount of money spent on the gift.
Amount of money spent on the gift = $378

Step 2: Subtract the amount spent on the gift from the updated initial amount of money in the wallet.
Amount of money left = Initial amount of money - Amount spent on the gift
Amount of money left = $529 - $378
Amount of money left = $151

Therefore, with the updated initial amount of $529 in your wallet, and after buying the gift for $378, you now have $151 left.

### Answer: $151

Expected answer: 151

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A rocket was initially at a height of 825 meters from the ground. It then descends and reaches a height of 429 meters. What is the height difference that the rocket has descended?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To find the height difference that the rocket has descended, we need to subtract the final height from the initial height.

Given information:
- Initial height of the rocket = 825 meters
- Final height of the rocket = 429 meters

Height difference = Initial height - Final height
Height difference = 825 meters - 429 meters
Height difference = 396 meters

Therefore, the rocket has descended a height difference of 396 meters.

### Answer: 396

Expected answer: 396

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer harvested 265 bunches of green grapes and 502 bunches of black grapes. How many bunches of grapes did the farmer harvest in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of bunches of green grapes and the number of bunches of black grapes.

Given information:
- The farmer harvested 265 bunches of green grapes.
- The farmer harvested 502 bunches of black grapes.

Step 1: Add the number of bunches of green grapes and black grapes.
Number of bunches of green grapes + Number of bunches of black grapes = Total number of bunches of grapes
265 + 502 = 767

Therefore, the farmer harvested a total of 767 bunches of grapes.

### Answer: 767

Expected answer: 767

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the total harvesting of green and black grapes, additional 216 bunches of red grapes ripened and were harvested. Now, how many total bunches of grapes (green, black, and red) did the farmer harvest?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* The farmer initially harvested 265 bunches of green grapes and 502 bunches of black grapes.
* The total number of bunches harvested initially was 265 + 502 = 767 bunches.
* After that, an additional 216 bunches of red grapes were harvested.

To find the total number of bunches of grapes harvested, we need to add the initial total to the additional red grapes harvested.

Total bunches harvested = Initial total + Additional red grapes
Total bunches harvested = 767 + 216
Total bunches harvested = 983

### Answer: 983

Expected answer: 983

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the fantasy world of Dragons, a dragon named Blaze breathes 297 flames per day. One day, due to unusual planetary alignment, the power of Blaze has increased and he breathed an additional 586 flames. How many flames did Blaze breathe in that day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of flames Blaze breathed on the day when his power increased.

Given information:
- Blaze normally breathes 297 flames per day.
- Due to the unusual planetary alignment, Blaze breathed an additional 586 flames.

Step 1: Find the total number of flames Blaze breathed on that day.
Total flames breathed = Normal flames per day + Additional flames due to increased power
Total flames breathed = 297 + 586
Total flames breathed = 883

Therefore, on the day when his power increased due to the unusual planetary alignment, Blaze breathed a total of 883 flames.

### Answer: 883

Expected answer: 883

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: From the previous setting, after blazing off 297 initial flames and additional 586 flames in a day due to unusual planetary alignment, Blaze the dragon needed to take rest, cooling down and diminishing his flames by 879. How many flames remained after this resting period?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find out how many flames remained after Blaze cooled down and diminished his flames by 879.

Given:
- Blaze initially breathed 297 flames per day.
- Due to the unusual planetary alignment, Blaze breathed an additional 586 flames.
- After the resting period, Blaze diminished his flames by 879.

Step 1: Calculate the total number of flames Blaze breathed before the resting period.
Total flames before resting = Initial flames + Additional flames
Total flames before resting = 297 + 586 = 883 flames

Step 2: Calculate the number of flames remaining after diminishing by 879 flames.
Remaining flames = Total flames before resting - Flames diminished
Remaining flames = 883 - 879 = 4 flames

Therefore, after the resting period, during which Blaze cooled down and diminished his flames by 879, there remained 4 flames.

### Answer: 4

Expected answer: 4

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Initially, Blaze the dragon was breathing 241 flames per day, rather than the 297 in our previous scenario. Then, due to the unusual planetary alignment, he still experienced the increase and breathed an additional 586 flames. How many flames did Blaze breathe in this case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Initially, Blaze breathed 241 flames per day.
- Due to the unusual planetary alignment, Blaze breathed an additional 586 flames.

Step 1: Find the total number of flames Blaze breathed on the day when his power increased.
Total flames breathed = Normal flames per day + Additional flames due to increased power
Total flames breathed = 241 + 586
Total flames breathed = 827

Therefore, with the initial daily flame count of 241 and the additional 586 flames due to the unusual planetary alignment, Blaze breathed a total of 827 flames on that day.

### Answer: 827

Expected answer: 827

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A toy shop has a total of 477 teddy bears. Today, they received a new shipment containing 260 more teddy bears. How many teddy bears does the toy shop have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of teddy bears after the new shipment is added to the existing stock.

Given information:
- The toy shop initially had 477 teddy bears.
- The new shipment contained 260 more teddy bears.

Step 1: Find the total number of teddy bears after the new shipment.
Total number of teddy bears = Initial number of teddy bears + Number of teddy bears in the new shipment
Total number of teddy bears = 477 + 260
Total number of teddy bears = 737

Therefore, after receiving the new shipment, the toy shop has a total of 737 teddy bears.

### Answer: 737

Expected answer: 737

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The same toy shop decided to add 16 special edition teddy bears to their collection. Now, how many teddy bears does the toy shop have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In the previous problem, we found that the toy shop had a total of 737 teddy bears after receiving the new shipment of 260 teddy bears.

Given information:
- The toy shop had 737 teddy bears.
- They added 16 special edition teddy bears to their collection.

To find the new total number of teddy bears, we need to add the number of special edition teddy bears to the existing total.

Step 1: Add the number of special edition teddy bears to the existing total.
New total number of teddy bears = Existing total number of teddy bears + Number of special edition teddy bears
New total number of teddy bears = 737 + 16
New total number of teddy bears = 753

Therefore, after adding 16 special edition teddy bears to their collection, the toy shop now has a total of 753 teddy bears.

### Answer: 753

Expected answer: 753

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the toy shop originally had 621 teddy bears, instead of 477, before receiving the shipment of 260 teddy bears. How many teddy bears would the toy shop have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- The toy shop originally had 621 teddy bears.
- The new shipment contained 260 more teddy bears.

To find the total number of teddy bears after the new shipment, we need to add the original number of teddy bears and the number of teddy bears in the new shipment.

Step 1: Find the total number of teddy bears after the new shipment.
Total number of teddy bears = Original number of teddy bears + Number of teddy bears in the new shipment
Total number of teddy bears = 621 + 260
Total number of teddy bears = 881

Therefore, if the toy shop originally had 621 teddy bears before receiving the shipment of 260 teddy bears, the toy shop would have a total of 881 teddy bears after the new shipment.

### Answer: 881

Expected answer: 881

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A restaurant started the week with 573 oranges for their fresh juice. However, throughout the week, they ended up using 228 oranges. How many oranges do they have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of oranges and the number of oranges used during the week.

Given information:
- The restaurant started the week with 573 oranges.
- The restaurant used 228 oranges during the week.

Step 1: Find the number of oranges left by subtracting the number of oranges used from the initial number of oranges.
Number of oranges left = Initial number of oranges - Number of oranges used
Number of oranges left = 573 - 228
Number of oranges left = 345

Therefore, the restaurant has 345 oranges left now.

### Answer: 345

Expected answer: 345

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After using 228 oranges from the original 573, the restaurant received a fresh delivery of 142 more oranges. Now, how many oranges does the restaurant have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* The restaurant started with 573 oranges
* They used 228 oranges
* So, they had 573 - 228 = 345 oranges left
* Then, they received a fresh delivery of 142 more oranges

To find the total number of oranges they have now, we need to add the number of oranges they had left (345) to the number of oranges they received in the fresh delivery (142).

345 + 142 = 487

Therefore, after using 228 oranges from the original 573 and receiving a fresh delivery of 142 more oranges, the restaurant now has a total of 487 oranges.

### Answer: 487

Expected answer: 487

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that instead of starting the week with 573 oranges, the restaurant had initially started with 573, but 20 oranges were deemed unsuitable for juicing. How many oranges would they have for producing fresh juice in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, we need to consider the initial number of oranges and subtract the number of unsuitable oranges to find the number of oranges available for producing fresh juice.

Given information:
- The restaurant initially had 573 oranges.
- 20 oranges were deemed unsuitable for juicing.
- The restaurant used 228 oranges during the week.

Step 1: Find the number of suitable oranges for juicing by subtracting the unsuitable oranges from the initial number of oranges.
Number of suitable oranges = Initial number of oranges - Number of unsuitable oranges
Number of suitable oranges = 573 - 20
Number of suitable oranges = 553

Step 2: Find the number of oranges left after using 228 oranges during the week.
Number of oranges left = Number of suitable oranges - Number of oranges used
Number of oranges left = 553 - 228
Number of oranges left = 325

Therefore, in this scenario, the restaurant would have 325 oranges for producing fresh juice.

### Answer: 325

Expected answer: 553

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: Kevin started with a total of 991 skateboard stickers. After an afternoon of decorating, he used up 828 stickers on his boards. How many skateboard stickers does he have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of skateboard stickers Kevin started with and the number of stickers he used up.

Given information:
- Kevin started with a total of 991 skateboard stickers.
- Kevin used up 828 stickers on his boards.

Step 1: Find the number of stickers Kevin has left.
Number of stickers left = Total number of stickers - Number of stickers used
Number of stickers left = 991 - 828
Number of stickers left = 163

Therefore, Kevin has 163 skateboard stickers left now.

### Answer: 163

Expected answer: 163

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After using his stickers, Kevin won a contest and received an extra 806 skateboard stickers. How many skateboard stickers does he have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the number of skateboard stickers Kevin had left and the number of stickers he received as a prize.

Given information:
- Kevin had 163 skateboard stickers left after using up some stickers.
- Kevin received an extra 806 skateboard stickers after winning a contest.

Step 1: Find the total number of skateboard stickers Kevin has now.
Total number of skateboard stickers = Number of stickers left + Number of stickers received
Total number of skateboard stickers = 163 + 806
Total number of skateboard stickers = 969

Therefore, Kevin has a total of 969 skateboard stickers now.

### Answer: 969

Expected answer: 969

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reconsidering, Kevin realized he only used 481 stickers instead of 828. Now, if we consider this new count, how many skateboard stickers does Kevin have left after decorating his board?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the number of skateboard stickers Kevin has left after using 481 stickers instead of 828.

Given information:
- Kevin started with a total of 991 skateboard stickers.
- Kevin used up 481 stickers on his boards.

Step 1: Find the number of stickers Kevin has left.
Number of stickers left = Total number of stickers - Number of stickers used
Number of stickers left = 991 - 481
Number of stickers left = 510

Therefore, after using 481 stickers, Kevin has 510 skateboard stickers left.

### Answer: 510

Expected answer: 510

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were originally 808 skateboards in the big sports store. After a big summer sale, they sold 337 skateboards. How many skateboards are left in the store now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the original number of skateboards and the number of skateboards sold during the sale.

Given information:
- There were originally 808 skateboards in the store.
- After the sale, 337 skateboards were sold.

Step 1: Find the number of skateboards remaining in the store.
Number of skateboards remaining = Original number of skateboards - Number of skateboards sold
Number of skateboards remaining = 808 - 337
Number of skateboards remaining = 471

Therefore, there are 471 skateboards left in the store now.

### Answer: 471

Expected answer: 471

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Reconsidering the first sale at the sports store, let's say that instead of initially having 808 skateboards they actually had only 365 skateboards. If they still sold 337 skateboards during the big summer sale, how many skateboards would have been left in the store?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's reconsider the problem with the new information.

Given information:
- There were originally 365 skateboards in the store.
- After the sale, 337 skateboards were sold.

Step 1: Find the number of skateboards remaining in the store.
Number of skateboards remaining = Original number of skateboards - Number of skateboards sold
Number of skateboards remaining = 365 - 337
Number of skateboards remaining = 28

Therefore, with the new information that the store initially had 365 skateboards and sold 337 skateboards during the sale, there would have been 28 skateboards left in the store.

### Answer: 28

Expected answer: 28

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A stationery shop had 245 pens. After a day of sales, they sold 130 pens. How many pens are still available in the shop?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of pens and the number of pens sold.

Given information:
- The stationery shop had 245 pens initially.
- The shop sold 130 pens after a day of sales.

Step 1: Find the number of pens remaining in the shop.
Number of pens remaining = Initial number of pens - Number of pens sold
Number of pens remaining = 245 - 130
Number of pens remaining = 115

Therefore, there are 115 pens still available in the shop.

### Answer: 115

Expected answer: 115

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The stationery shop received a new shipment of 538 pens the following day. Including the remaining pens from the previous day, how many pens are there in the shop now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the remaining pens from the previous day and the new shipment of pens.

Given information:
- There were 115 pens remaining in the shop from the previous day.
- The shop received a new shipment of 538 pens.

Step 1: Find the total number of pens in the shop after the new shipment.
Total number of pens = Remaining pens from the previous day + New shipment of pens
Total number of pens = 115 + 538
Total number of pens = 653

Therefore, there are 653 pens in the stationery shop now, including the remaining pens from the previous day and the new shipment.

### Answer: 653

Expected answer: 653

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of 245 pens, the stationery shop initially had 820 pens before the day of sales when they sold 130. How many pens would be left in the shop in that case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The stationery shop had 820 pens initially.
- The shop sold 130 pens after a day of sales.

Step 1: Find the number of pens remaining in the shop.
Number of pens remaining = Initial number of pens - Number of pens sold
Number of pens remaining = 820 - 130
Number of pens remaining = 690

Therefore, if the stationery shop initially had 820 pens before the day of sales and they sold 130 pens, there would be 690 pens left in the shop.

### Answer: 690

Expected answer: 690

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were initially 300 firefighters in one city. Recently, 501 more firefighters were recruited in an effort to boost the city's fire fighting capacity. How many firefighters are there now in the city?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of firefighters after the new recruitment.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 300 firefighters in the city.
- 501 more firefighters were recruited recently.

To find the total number of firefighters now, we need to add the initial number of firefighters and the number of newly recruited firefighters.

Total number of firefighters = Initial number of firefighters + Number of newly recruited firefighters
Total number of firefighters = 300 + 501
Total number of firefighters = 801

Therefore, there are now 801 firefighters in the city.

### Answer: 801

Expected answer: 801

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After a few more months, 76 more firefighters were trained and added to the team. How many firefighters are there now in the city?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Initially, there were 300 firefighters in the city.
Then, 501 more firefighters were recruited, making the total 300 + 501 = 801 firefighters.
Now, we are told that 76 more firefighters were trained and added to the team.

To find the new total, we take the previous total (801) and add the new firefighters (76):

Previous total: 801 firefighters
New firefighters added: 76 firefighters
New total = Previous total + New firefighters added
            = 801 + 76
            = 877 firefighters

Therefore, after adding the 76 newly trained firefighters, there are now 877 firefighters in the city.

### Answer: 877

Expected answer: 877

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if there were originally only 434 firefighters in the city instead of 300? After adding the 501 new recruits, how many firefighters would there have been in the city then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- Initially, there were 434 firefighters in the city.
- 501 more firefighters were recruited recently.

To find the total number of firefighters after the new recruitment, we need to add the initial number of firefighters and the number of newly recruited firefighters.

Total number of firefighters = Initial number of firefighters + Number of newly recruited firefighters
Total number of firefighters = 434 + 501
Total number of firefighters = 935

Therefore, if there were originally 434 firefighters in the city, and 501 new firefighters were recruited, there would have been 935 firefighters in the city after the new recruitment.

### Answer: 935

Expected answer: 935

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Captain Redbeard found 211 gold coins in a hidden treasure chest on a deserted island. Meanwhile, his first mate found 651 gold coins in a different location on the same island. How many gold coins did they find in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of gold coins found by Captain Redbeard and his first mate.

Given information:
- Captain Redbeard found 211 gold coins.
- Captain Redbeard's first mate found 651 gold coins.

Step 1: Add the number of gold coins found by Captain Redbeard and his first mate.
Total gold coins found = Gold coins found by Captain Redbeard + Gold coins found by his first mate
Total gold coins found = 211 + 651
Total gold coins found = 862

Therefore, Captain Redbeard and his first mate found a total of 862 gold coins on the deserted island.

### Answer: 862

Expected answer: 862

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After finding the gold, Captain Redbeard and his first mate returned to their pirate ship where their crew had already secured 824 gold coins from a previous raid. How many more gold coins did they get from the deserted island compared to the coins secured from the previous raid?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of gold coins found on the deserted island and the number of gold coins secured from the previous raid.

Given information:
- Captain Redbeard and his first mate found a total of 862 gold coins on the deserted island.
- The crew had already secured 824 gold coins from a previous raid.

Step 1: Find the difference between the total gold coins found on the deserted island and the gold coins secured from the previous raid.
Difference in gold coins = Total gold coins found on the deserted island - Gold coins secured from the previous raid
Difference in gold coins = 862 - 824
Difference in gold coins = 38

Therefore, Captain Redbeard and his crew got 38 more gold coins from the deserted island compared to the coins secured from the previous raid.

### Answer: 38

Expected answer: 38

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, suppose Captain Redbeard had actually found 211 gold coins and his first mate found 425 gold coins on that deserted island. In this case, how many gold coins did they find in total on the deserted island?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Captain Redbeard found 211 gold coins.
- Captain Redbeard's first mate found 425 gold coins.

To find the total number of gold coins they found on the deserted island, we need to add the number of gold coins found by Captain Redbeard and his first mate.

Step 1: Add the number of gold coins found by Captain Redbeard and his first mate.
Total gold coins found = Gold coins found by Captain Redbeard + Gold coins found by his first mate
Total gold coins found = 211 + 425
Total gold coins found = 636

Therefore, with the updated information, Captain Redbeard and his first mate found a total of 636 gold coins on the deserted island.

### Answer: 636

Expected answer: 636

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a large city, there were originally 976 registered dogs. However, 586 dogs moved away with their owners over the year. How many dogs are still registered in the city?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the original number of registered dogs and the number of dogs that moved away.

Given information:
- There were originally 976 registered dogs in the city.
- 586 dogs moved away with their owners over the year.

Step 1: Find the number of dogs that remained in the city.
Number of dogs that remained = Original number of registered dogs - Number of dogs that moved away
Number of dogs that remained = 976 - 586
Number of dogs that remained = 390

Therefore, there are 390 dogs still registered in the city.

### Answer: 390

Expected answer: 390

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario, suppose that instead of 976 registered dogs in the city, there were actually 976 - 465 dogs. How many dogs were registered in the city before the recent pet adoption event and before any dogs moved away?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Originally, there were (976 - 465) registered dogs in the city
* Then, 586 dogs moved away with their owners

To find the number of registered dogs before any dogs moved away, we need to add the number of dogs that moved away (586) to the original number of registered dogs (976 - 465).

Original number of registered dogs = (976 - 465) + 586
Original number of registered dogs = 511 + 586
Original number of registered dogs = 1097

Therefore, before the recent pet adoption event and before any dogs moved away, there were 1097 dogs registered in the city.

### Answer: 1097

Expected answer: 511

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: A wildlife sanctuary has 145 tigers initially. Due to their migration to a nearby forest, 26 tigers have left the sanctuary. How many tigers remain in the sanctuary now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of tigers that left the sanctuary from the initial number of tigers.

Given information:
- The wildlife sanctuary initially had 145 tigers.
- 26 tigers left the sanctuary due to migration.

Step 1: Subtract the number of tigers that left from the initial number of tigers.
Number of tigers remaining = Initial number of tigers - Number of tigers that left
Number of tigers remaining = 145 - 26
Number of tigers remaining = 119

Therefore, 119 tigers remain in the sanctuary now.

### Answer: 119

Expected answer: 119

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a nearby forest, there is another wildlife sanctuary which has exactly the same number of tigers as the first sanctuary after the migration happened. How many tigers are there in total in these two sanctuaries now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of tigers in both sanctuaries after the migration.

Given information:
- The first sanctuary had 145 tigers initially.
- 26 tigers left the first sanctuary due to migration.
- The second sanctuary has exactly the same number of tigers as the first sanctuary after the migration.

Step 1: Find the number of tigers remaining in the first sanctuary after the migration.
Number of tigers remaining in the first sanctuary = Initial number of tigers - Number of tigers that left
Number of tigers remaining in the first sanctuary = 145 - 26 = 119

Step 2: Find the number of tigers in the second sanctuary.
Number of tigers in the second sanctuary = Number of tigers remaining in the first sanctuary
Number of tigers in the second sanctuary = 119

Step 3: Find the total number of tigers in both sanctuaries.
Total number of tigers = Number of tigers in the first sanctuary + Number of tigers in the second sanctuary
Total number of tigers = 119 + 119 = 238

Therefore, there are a total of 238 tigers in these two sanctuaries now.

### Answer: 238

Expected answer: 238

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Consider the case where the first wildlife sanctuary originally had 868 tigers, and then 26 migrated to a nearby forest. How many tigers would remain in the sanctuary in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of tigers that migrated from the initial number of tigers in the first wildlife sanctuary.

Given information:
- The first wildlife sanctuary initially had 868 tigers.
- 26 tigers migrated to a nearby forest.

Step 1: Subtract the number of tigers that migrated from the initial number of tigers.
Number of tigers remaining = Initial number of tigers - Number of tigers that migrated
Number of tigers remaining = 868 - 26
Number of tigers remaining = 842

Therefore, in this scenario, 842 tigers would remain in the first wildlife sanctuary after 26 tigers migrated to a nearby forest.

### Answer: 842

Expected answer: 842

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A rocket is launched into space from a height of 103 meters. After a few seconds, it reaches a height of 53 meters lower than the initial height. What is the current height of the rocket?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial height and the height that is 53 meters lower.

Given information:
- The initial height of the rocket is 103 meters.
- The current height is 53 meters lower than the initial height.

Step 1: Find the height that is 53 meters lower than the initial height.
Initial height - 53 meters = Current height
103 meters - 53 meters = 50 meters

Therefore, the current height of the rocket is 50 meters.

### Answer: 50

Expected answer: 50

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, after reaching a certain height, the rocket still has 386 meters left to travel to reach its final destination. Given how much further it has left to travel, what will be the total distance the rocket will travel?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total distance the rocket will travel, which is the sum of the distance it has already traveled and the remaining distance to its final destination.

Given information:
- The rocket started from a height of 103 meters.
- The current height of the rocket is 50 meters (from the previous question).
- The rocket still has 386 meters left to travel to reach its final destination.

Step 1: Find the distance the rocket has already traveled.
Distance traveled = Initial height - Current height
Distance traveled = 103 meters - 50 meters = 53 meters

Step 2: Find the total distance the rocket will travel.
Total distance = Distance traveled + Remaining distance
Total distance = 53 meters + 386 meters = 439 meters

Therefore, the total distance the rocket will travel is 439 meters.

### Answer: 439

Expected answer: 436

Correct? No

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous situation, suppose the rocket was initially launched from a much higher ground at 796 meters instead of 103 meters. How high is the rocket after it traveled 53 meters lower than its initial height?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the height of the rocket after it traveled 53 meters lower than its initial height.

Given information:
- The initial height of the rocket is 796 meters.
- The current height is 53 meters lower than the initial height.

Step 1: Find the height that is 53 meters lower than the initial height.
Initial height - 53 meters = Current height
796 meters - 53 meters = 743 meters

Therefore, the current height of the rocket after it traveled 53 meters lower than its initial height of 796 meters is 743 meters.

### Answer: 743

Expected answer: 743

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A tube of toothpaste usually lasts for 521 days in a household. The family bought a new type of toothpaste which claims an extra 10 days of usage. How many days will the new toothpaste last for the family?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of days the new toothpaste will last by adding the extra 10 days to the usual duration of 521 days.

Given information:
- A tube of toothpaste usually lasts for 521 days in the household.
- The new type of toothpaste claims an extra 10 days of usage.

Step 1: Add the extra 10 days to the usual duration of 521 days.
Number of days the new toothpaste will last = Usual duration + Extra days
Number of days the new toothpaste will last = 521 days + 10 days
Number of days the new toothpaste will last = 531 days

Therefore, the new toothpaste will last for 531 days in the household.

### Answer: 531

Expected answer: 531

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that the original type of toothpaste that the family normally used lasted for 310 days instead of the 521 days. They decided to buy the new type of toothpaste again, which claimed an additional 10 days of usage. How many days will the new toothpaste last this time for the family?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find the number of days the new toothpaste will last for the family, given that the original type of toothpaste lasted for 310 days, and the new type claims an additional 10 days of usage.

Given information:
- The original type of toothpaste lasted for 310 days.
- The new type of toothpaste claims an additional 10 days of usage.

Step 1: Add the additional 10 days to the original duration of 310 days.
Number of days the new toothpaste will last = Original duration + Additional days
Number of days the new toothpaste will last = 310 days + 10 days
Number of days the new toothpaste will last = 320 days

Therefore, the new toothpaste will last for 320 days for the family.

### Answer: 320

Expected answer: 320

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were initially 547 clouds in the sky. Then, a gust of wind blew in and added an additional 90 clouds. How many clouds are there in the sky now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the initial number of clouds and the additional clouds brought by the gust of wind.

Given information:
- There were initially 547 clouds in the sky.
- A gust of wind added an additional 90 clouds.

Step 1: Add the initial number of clouds and the additional clouds.
Initial number of clouds + Additional clouds = Total number of clouds
547 + 90 = 637

Therefore, there are now 637 clouds in the sky.

### Answer: 637

Expected answer: 637

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following on from the previous question: Now, there are 547 clouds in the sky. Then, a gust of wind blew in and added an additional 90 clouds. But after a while, due to the hot sun, 435 of those clouds evaporated. How many clouds are there in the sky now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of clouds after the gust of wind added 90 clouds, and then subtract the number of clouds that evaporated due to the hot sun.

Given information:
- There were initially 547 clouds in the sky.
- A gust of wind added an additional 90 clouds.
- Due to the hot sun, 435 clouds evaporated.

Step 1: Find the total number of clouds after the gust of wind added 90 clouds.
Initial number of clouds + Additional clouds = Total number of clouds after the gust of wind
547 + 90 = 637 clouds

Step 2: Subtract the number of clouds that evaporated from the total number of clouds after the gust of wind.
Total number of clouds after the gust of wind - Number of clouds evaporated = Remaining number of clouds
637 - 435 = 202 clouds

Therefore, there are now 202 clouds in the sky.

### Answer: 202

Expected answer: 202

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing on from the previous problem: Suppose that initially, there weren't 547 clouds in the sky, but instead, there were 283 clouds. Then, a gust of wind blew in and added an additional 90 clouds. How many clouds are there in the sky now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- There were initially 283 clouds in the sky.
- A gust of wind added an additional 90 clouds.

Step 1: Add the initial number of clouds and the additional clouds.
Initial number of clouds + Additional clouds = Total number of clouds
283 + 90 = 373

Therefore, with the updated initial number of clouds being 283, and the additional 90 clouds brought by the gust of wind, there are now 373 clouds in the sky.

### Answer: 373

Expected answer: 373

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The grand castle has 189 rooms in the main building. In addition, there are 546 rooms in the secondary buildings. How many total rooms does the castle have?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of rooms in the main building and the number of rooms in the secondary buildings.

Given information:
- The main building of the grand castle has 189 rooms.
- The secondary buildings of the grand castle have 546 rooms.

Step 1: Add the number of rooms in the main building and the secondary buildings.
Number of rooms in the main building + Number of rooms in the secondary buildings = Total number of rooms in the castle
189 + 546 = 735

Therefore, the grand castle has a total of 735 rooms.

### Answer: 735

Expected answer: 735

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous situation, unfortunately due to a large storm, 608 rooms across the castle's main and secondary buildings were damaged and are temporarily unusable. How many rooms in the castle are still available?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of damaged rooms from the total number of rooms in the castle.

Given information:
- The grand castle has a total of 735 rooms (from the previous problem).
- 608 rooms across the main and secondary buildings were damaged and are temporarily unusable.

Step 1: Subtract the number of damaged rooms from the total number of rooms in the castle.
Total number of rooms in the castle - Number of damaged rooms = Number of available rooms
735 - 608 = 127

Therefore, there are 127 rooms in the castle that are still available.

### Answer: 127

Expected answer: 127

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the original scenario, let's suppose that there were actually only 189 rooms in the main building and an additional 87 rooms in the secondary buildings of the castle, instead of the numbers previously mentioned. How many total rooms would the castle have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the total number of rooms in the castle with the new information.

Given information:
- The main building of the grand castle has 189 rooms.
- The secondary buildings of the grand castle have 87 rooms.

Step 1: Add the number of rooms in the main building and the secondary buildings.
Number of rooms in the main building + Number of rooms in the secondary buildings = Total number of rooms in the castle
189 + 87 = 276

Therefore, with the updated information, the grand castle has a total of 276 rooms.

### Answer: 276

Expected answer: 276

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: An astronaut started a journey with 866 kilograms of fuel in his departure. During takeoff and the initial part of the journey, 196 kilograms of fuel were used. How much fuel does the astronaut have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial amount of fuel and the amount of fuel used during takeoff and the initial part of the journey.

Given information:
- The astronaut started with 866 kilograms of fuel.
- During takeoff and the initial part of the journey, 196 kilograms of fuel were used.

Step 1: Find the amount of fuel remaining.
Amount of fuel remaining = Initial amount of fuel - Amount of fuel used
Amount of fuel remaining = 866 kilograms - 196 kilograms
Amount of fuel remaining = 670 kilograms

Therefore, the astronaut has 670 kilograms of fuel left.

### Answer: 670

Expected answer: 670

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous question, the astronaut detected another spaceship with an emergency. This spaceship needed 937 kilograms of fuel to return to Earth. If they use the leftover fuel from the astronaut's spaceship, how much additional fuel do they need to get back to Earth?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In the previous question, we found that the astronaut had 670 kilograms of fuel left after the initial part of the journey.

Given information:
- The astronaut has 670 kilograms of fuel left.
- The other spaceship needs 937 kilograms of fuel to return to Earth.

To find the additional fuel needed, we need to subtract the amount of fuel the astronaut has left from the amount of fuel the other spaceship needs.

Step 1: Find the additional fuel needed.
Additional fuel needed = Amount of fuel needed by the other spaceship - Amount of fuel the astronaut has left
Additional fuel needed = 937 kilograms - 670 kilograms
Additional fuel needed = 267 kilograms

Therefore, the other spaceship needs an additional 267 kilograms of fuel to return to Earth after using the astronaut's leftover fuel.

### Answer: 267

Expected answer: 267

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, let's consider a different journey where the astronaut started with the same amount of fuel, 866 kilograms. Unfortunately this time, due to a longer and more complex takeoff process, the astronaut used up 632 kilograms of fuel. How much fuel does the astronaut have left now in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, we need to find the amount of fuel remaining after using 632 kilograms of fuel during the longer and more complex takeoff process.

Given information:
- The astronaut started with 866 kilograms of fuel.
- During the longer and more complex takeoff process, 632 kilograms of fuel were used.

Step 1: Find the amount of fuel remaining.
Amount of fuel remaining = Initial amount of fuel - Amount of fuel used
Amount of fuel remaining = 866 kilograms - 632 kilograms
Amount of fuel remaining = 234 kilograms

Therefore, in this scenario, the astronaut has 234 kilograms of fuel left after the longer and more complex takeoff process.

### Answer: 234

Expected answer: 234

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A train has started its journey with 796 passengers. On the first stop, 533 passengers have left the train. How many passengers are still on the train?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of passengers and the number of passengers who left the train at the first stop.

Given information:
- The train started its journey with 796 passengers.
- At the first stop, 533 passengers left the train.

Step 1: Find the number of passengers remaining on the train after the first stop.
Number of passengers remaining = Initial number of passengers - Number of passengers who left
Number of passengers remaining = 796 - 533
Number of passengers remaining = 263

Therefore, after the first stop, there are 263 passengers still on the train.

### Answer: 263

Expected answer: 263

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In retrospect, the train actually started its journey with 908 passengers instead of 796. Given this, how many passengers remained on the train after 533 of them left at the first stop?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the updated information.

Given information:
- The train started its journey with 908 passengers.
- At the first stop, 533 passengers left the train.

Step 1: Find the number of passengers remaining on the train after the first stop.
Number of passengers remaining = Initial number of passengers - Number of passengers who left
Number of passengers remaining = 908 - 533
Number of passengers remaining = 375

Therefore, with the updated initial number of passengers as 908, and after 533 passengers left at the first stop, there are 375 passengers remaining on the train.

### Answer: 375

Expected answer: 375

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In Megacare Hospital, there are 391 doctors specializing in adult care and 232 doctors specializing in pediatric care. How many doctors are there in total in the hospital?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of doctors in the hospital by adding the number of doctors specializing in adult care and the number of doctors specializing in pediatric care.

Given information:
- There are 391 doctors specializing in adult care.
- There are 232 doctors specializing in pediatric care.

Step 1: Add the number of doctors specializing in adult care and the number of doctors specializing in pediatric care.
Total number of doctors = Number of doctors specializing in adult care + Number of doctors specializing in pediatric care
Total number of doctors = 391 + 232
Total number of doctors = 623

Therefore, there are 623 doctors in total in Megacare Hospital.

### Answer: 623

Expected answer: 623

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In Megacare Hospital, there are 391 doctors specializing in adult care and 232 doctors specializing in pediatric care. Additionally, 250 doctors arrived from another hospital to assist in the care. How many doctors are currently working in Megacare Hospital?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of doctors currently working in Megacare Hospital by adding the number of doctors already present and the number of doctors who arrived from another hospital.

Given information:
- There are 391 doctors specializing in adult care.
- There are 232 doctors specializing in pediatric care.
- 250 doctors arrived from another hospital to assist in the care.

Step 1: Find the total number of doctors already present in Megacare Hospital.
Total number of doctors already present = Number of doctors specializing in adult care + Number of doctors specializing in pediatric care
Total number of doctors already present = 391 + 232
Total number of doctors already present = 623

Step 2: Add the number of doctors who arrived from another hospital to the total number of doctors already present.
Total number of doctors currently working = Total number of doctors already present + Number of doctors who arrived
Total number of doctors currently working = 623 + 250
Total number of doctors currently working = 873

Therefore, there are currently 873 doctors working in Megacare Hospital.

### Answer: 873

Expected answer: 873

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The Ice Skating Center had 847 pairs of ice skates at the beginning of the season. After some weeks, 297 pairs of skates were rented out for children’s lessons. How many pairs of ice skates does the Ice Skating Center have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of pairs of ice skates and the number of pairs rented out.

Given information:
- The Ice Skating Center had 847 pairs of ice skates at the beginning of the season.
- 297 pairs of skates were rented out for children's lessons.

Step 1: Find the number of pairs of ice skates left after renting out 297 pairs.
Number of pairs of ice skates left = Initial number of pairs - Number of pairs rented out
Number of pairs of ice skates left = 847 - 297
Number of pairs of ice skates left = 550

Therefore, the Ice Skating Center has 550 pairs of ice skates left after renting out 297 pairs for children's lessons.

### Answer: 550

Expected answer: 550

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if the Ice Skating Center had initially rented out only 146 pairs of ice skates for children's lessons instead of 297 pairs. How many pairs of ice skates would the Ice Skating Center have left then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The Ice Skating Center had 847 pairs of ice skates at the beginning of the season.
- 146 pairs of skates were rented out for children's lessons.

Step 1: Find the number of pairs of ice skates left after renting out 146 pairs.
Number of pairs of ice skates left = Initial number of pairs - Number of pairs rented out
Number of pairs of ice skates left = 847 - 146
Number of pairs of ice skates left = 701

Therefore, if the Ice Skating Center had rented out only 146 pairs of ice skates for children's lessons instead of 297 pairs, they would have 701 pairs of ice skates left.

### Answer: 701

Expected answer: 701

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were initially 857 penguins in a large South African colony. Over time, due to various factors, their number decreased by 600. How many penguins are left in the colony?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of penguins that decreased from the initial number of penguins.

Given information:
- There were initially 857 penguins in the colony.
- The number of penguins decreased by 600.

Step 1: Subtract the number of penguins that decreased from the initial number of penguins.
Initial number of penguins - Number of penguins that decreased = Number of penguins left
857 - 600 = 257

Therefore, there are 257 penguins left in the colony.

### Answer: 257

Expected answer: 257

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the reduction in their numbers in the South African colony, 466 penguins migrated from a different location to join the colony. How many penguins are now in the colony after the migration?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of penguins that migrated to the colony to the number of penguins that were already in the colony after the initial reduction.

Given information:
- After the initial reduction, there were 257 penguins left in the colony.
- 466 penguins migrated from a different location to join the colony.

Step 1: Add the number of penguins that migrated to the number of penguins already in the colony.
Number of penguins already in the colony + Number of penguins that migrated = Total number of penguins in the colony after migration
257 + 466 = 723

Therefore, there are now 723 penguins in the colony after the migration.

### Answer: 723

Expected answer: 723

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Originally, instead of 857, suppose there were only 722 penguins in the South African colony. With the same reduction of 600 due to various factors, how many penguins would have been left in the colony then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of penguins that decreased (600) from the initial number of penguins (722).

Given information:
- There were initially 722 penguins in the colony.
- The number of penguins decreased by 600.

Step 1: Subtract the number of penguins that decreased from the initial number of penguins.
Initial number of penguins - Number of penguins that decreased = Number of penguins left
722 - 600 = 122

Therefore, if there were initially 722 penguins in the colony and the number decreased by 600, there would have been 122 penguins left in the colony.

### Answer: 122

Expected answer: 122

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a farm, there were initially 419 strawberries. As the season progressed, an additional 355 strawberries grew. How many strawberries are there now in total in the farm?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the initial number of strawberries and the additional strawberries that grew.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 419 strawberries in the farm.
- An additional 355 strawberries grew during the season.

Total number of strawberries = Initial number of strawberries + Additional strawberries that grew
Total number of strawberries = 419 + 355
Total number of strawberries = 774

### Answer: 774

Expected answer: 774

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a farm, there were initially 419 strawberries. As the season progressed, an additional 355 strawberries grew. However, 116 strawberries got eaten by birds. How many strawberries are there now in total in the farm?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of strawberries after adding the additional strawberries that grew, and then subtract the number of strawberries eaten by birds.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 419 strawberries in the farm.
- An additional 355 strawberries grew during the season.
- 116 strawberries were eaten by birds.

Step 1: Find the total number of strawberries after adding the additional strawberries that grew.
Total number of strawberries = Initial number of strawberries + Additional strawberries that grew
Total number of strawberries = 419 + 355 = 774

Step 2: Subtract the number of strawberries eaten by birds from the total number of strawberries.
Remaining number of strawberries = Total number of strawberries - Strawberries eaten by birds
Remaining number of strawberries = 774 - 116 = 658

### Answer: 658

Expected answer: 658

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the same farm, consider a situation where there were initially 419 strawberries. Now instead of the previous scenario, only 24 more strawberries grew as the season progressed. How many strawberries are there now in total in the farm?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the initial number of strawberries and the additional strawberries that grew.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 419 strawberries in the farm.
- An additional 24 strawberries grew during the season.

Total number of strawberries = Initial number of strawberries + Additional strawberries that grew
Total number of strawberries = 419 + 24
Total number of strawberries = 443

### Answer: 443

Expected answer: 443

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a pet store, there are 312 white mice and 403 brown mice. How many mice are there in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of white mice and the number of brown mice.

Given information:
- There are 312 white mice.
- There are 403 brown mice.

Step 1: Add the number of white mice and brown mice.
Number of white mice + Number of brown mice = Total number of mice
312 + 403 = 715

Therefore, there are 715 mice in total in the pet store.

### Answer: 715

Expected answer: 715

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a pet store, there are 312 white mice and 403 brown mice. Then, the pet store received a shipment of 268 more brown mice. How many mice are there in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of mice after the new shipment of brown mice arrived.

Given information:
- There are initially 312 white mice.
- There are initially 403 brown mice.
- The pet store received a shipment of 268 more brown mice.

Step 1: Find the total number of mice before the new shipment.
Number of white mice + Number of brown mice = Total number of mice before the new shipment
312 + 403 = 715 mice

Step 2: Find the total number of brown mice after the new shipment.
Initial number of brown mice + Number of new brown mice = Total number of brown mice after the new shipment
403 + 268 = 671 brown mice

Step 3: Find the total number of mice after the new shipment.
Total number of mice before the new shipment + Number of new brown mice = Total number of mice after the new shipment
715 + 268 = 983 mice

Therefore, there are 983 mice in total in the pet store after the new shipment of brown mice.

### Answer: 983

Expected answer: 983

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were initially 193 grapes on a vine. Some squirrels came along and ate 86 of them. How many grapes are left on the vine?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of grapes eaten by the squirrels from the initial number of grapes on the vine.

Given information:
- There were initially 193 grapes on the vine.
- The squirrels ate 86 grapes.

Step 1: Subtract the number of grapes eaten by the squirrels from the initial number of grapes.
Number of grapes left on the vine = Initial number of grapes - Number of grapes eaten by squirrels
Number of grapes left on the vine = 193 - 86
Number of grapes left on the vine = 107

Therefore, there are 107 grapes left on the vine after the squirrels ate 86 grapes.

### Answer: 107

Expected answer: 107

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if there were originally 217 grapes on the first vine instead of 193, and then the squirrels came and ate 86 of them? How many grapes would be left on that vine?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- There were initially 217 grapes on the vine.
- The squirrels ate 86 grapes.

Step 1: Subtract the number of grapes eaten by the squirrels from the initial number of grapes.
Number of grapes left on the vine = Initial number of grapes - Number of grapes eaten by squirrels
Number of grapes left on the vine = 217 - 86
Number of grapes left on the vine = 131

Therefore, if there were originally 217 grapes on the vine and the squirrels ate 86 of them, there would be 131 grapes left on the vine.

### Answer: 131

Expected answer: 131

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farm has 473 cows. The farmer buys another 125 cows. How many cows are there on the farm after the purchase?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of cows the farmer initially had to the number of cows he bought.

Given information:
- The farm initially had 473 cows.
- The farmer bought 125 more cows.

Step 1: Add the number of cows the farmer initially had to the number of cows he bought.
Number of cows after the purchase = Initial number of cows + Number of cows bought
Number of cows after the purchase = 473 + 125
Number of cows after the purchase = 598

Therefore, after the purchase, there are 598 cows on the farm.

### Answer: 598

Expected answer: 598

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After some time, the farmer had to sell 298 cows due to financial limitations. How many cows are there on the farm now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of cows the farmer sold from the total number of cows he had after the initial purchase.

Given information:
- The farm had 598 cows after the initial purchase.
- The farmer sold 298 cows due to financial limitations.

Step 1: Subtract the number of cows sold from the total number of cows after the initial purchase.
Number of cows remaining on the farm = Total number of cows after the initial purchase - Number of cows sold
Number of cows remaining on the farm = 598 - 298
Number of cows remaining on the farm = 300

Therefore, after selling 298 cows, there are 300 cows remaining on the farm.

### Answer: 300

Expected answer: 300

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if the farmer originally had 321 cows instead of 473 before buying another 125 cows? How many cows would be on the farm then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The farm initially had 321 cows.
- The farmer bought 125 more cows.

Step 1: Add the number of cows the farmer initially had to the number of cows he bought.
Number of cows after the purchase = Initial number of cows + Number of cows bought
Number of cows after the purchase = 321 + 125
Number of cows after the purchase = 446

Therefore, if the farmer originally had 321 cows before buying another 125 cows, there would be 446 cows on the farm after the purchase.

### Answer: 446

Expected answer: 446

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A ballerina performed a beautiful dance sequence that included 280 pirouettes. During her performance, she stumbled and could not complete 165 pirouettes. How many pirouettes did the ballerina successfully perform?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of pirouettes in the dance sequence and the number of pirouettes the ballerina could not complete.

Given information:
- The dance sequence included 280 pirouettes.
- The ballerina could not complete 165 pirouettes.

Step 1: Find the number of pirouettes the ballerina successfully performed.
Number of pirouettes successfully performed = Total pirouettes in the dance sequence - Number of pirouettes not completed
Number of pirouettes successfully performed = 280 - 165
Number of pirouettes successfully performed = 115

Therefore, the ballerina successfully performed 115 pirouettes.

### Answer: 115

Expected answer: 115

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing the video of her performance, the ballerina realized she had actually performed 443 pirouettes, not 280 as she initially thought. However, she still stumbled and couldn't complete 165 pirouettes. How many pirouettes did the ballerina successfully perform according to the new count?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- The dance sequence included 443 pirouettes (updated count).
- The ballerina could not complete 165 pirouettes (same as before).

Step 1: Find the number of pirouettes the ballerina successfully performed.
Number of pirouettes successfully performed = Total pirouettes in the dance sequence - Number of pirouettes not completed
Number of pirouettes successfully performed = 443 - 165
Number of pirouettes successfully performed = 278

Therefore, with the updated count of 443 total pirouettes, and still not being able to complete 165 of them, the ballerina successfully performed 278 pirouettes.

### Answer: 278

Expected answer: 278

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer had a bumper crop of 999 lemons this season. He sold 276 lemons at his local farmers market. How many lemons does he have remaining?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of lemons the farmer had and the number of lemons he sold at the farmers market.

Given information:
- The farmer had a bumper crop of 999 lemons.
- The farmer sold 276 lemons at the local farmers market.

Step 1: Find the number of lemons remaining.
Number of lemons remaining = Total number of lemons - Number of lemons sold
Number of lemons remaining = 999 - 276
Number of lemons remaining = 723

Therefore, the farmer has 723 lemons remaining after selling 276 lemons at the local farmers market.

### Answer: 723

Expected answer: 723

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the same scenario as the previous question, instead of the farmer selling 276 lemons, imagine that he initially only sold 10 lemons at the local farmers' market from his bumper crop of 999 lemons. How many lemons would the farmer have left after this smaller sale?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, we need to find the number of lemons remaining after the farmer sold 10 lemons from his bumper crop of 999 lemons.

Given information:
- The farmer had a bumper crop of 999 lemons.
- The farmer sold 10 lemons at the local farmers market.

Step 1: Find the number of lemons remaining.
Number of lemons remaining = Total number of lemons - Number of lemons sold
Number of lemons remaining = 999 - 10
Number of lemons remaining = 989

Therefore, after selling 10 lemons at the local farmers market, the farmer would have 989 lemons remaining from his bumper crop of 999 lemons.

### Answer: 989

Expected answer: 989

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A pirate ship initially had 275 barrels of rum. After a long journey, the crew consumed 230 barrels. How many barrels of rum are left on the pirate ship now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of barrels of rum and the number of barrels consumed by the crew.

Given information:
- The pirate ship initially had 275 barrels of rum.
- The crew consumed 230 barrels of rum during the journey.

Step 1: Find the number of barrels of rum left on the pirate ship.
Number of barrels of rum left = Initial number of barrels - Number of barrels consumed
Number of barrels of rum left = 275 - 230
Number of barrels of rum left = 45

Therefore, there are 45 barrels of rum left on the pirate ship now.

### Answer: 45

Expected answer: 45

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: What if initially, the pirate ship had 275 barrels of rum, but the crew consumed only 104 of them. How many barrels of rum would remain on the ship under this circumstance?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The pirate ship initially had 275 barrels of rum.
- The crew consumed 104 barrels of rum during the journey.

Step 1: Find the number of barrels of rum left on the pirate ship.
Number of barrels of rum left = Initial number of barrels - Number of barrels consumed
Number of barrels of rum left = 275 - 104
Number of barrels of rum left = 171

Therefore, if the pirate ship initially had 275 barrels of rum and the crew consumed only 104 barrels, there would be 171 barrels of rum remaining on the ship.

### Answer: 171

Expected answer: 171

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a novel, the first section has 48 pages and the second section boasts 899 pages. How many pages are there in total in the first two sections?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of pages in the first section and the second section.

Given information:
- The first section has 48 pages.
- The second section has 899 pages.

Step 1: Add the number of pages in the first section and the second section.
Number of pages in the first section + Number of pages in the second section = Total number of pages in the first two sections
48 + 899 = 947

Therefore, there are 947 pages in total in the first two sections of the novel.

### Answer: 947

Expected answer: 947

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After having read a significant portion of the novel, a reader finds out they've already read 215 pages. How many pages are left for them to read in the first two sections of the novel?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To find the number of pages left to read in the first two sections of the novel, we need to subtract the number of pages already read from the total number of pages in the first two sections.

Given information:
- The total number of pages in the first two sections is 947 (from the previous question).
- The reader has already read 215 pages.

Step 1: Subtract the number of pages already read from the total number of pages in the first two sections.
Total number of pages in the first two sections - Number of pages already read = Number of pages left to read
947 - 215 = 732

Therefore, the reader has 732 pages left to read in the first two sections of the novel.

### Answer: 732

Expected answer: 732

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Having completed their reading for the day, the reader wonders what if the first section of the novel had 291 pages instead of 899 pages. Together with the 48 pages from the second section, how many pages would have been in the two sections of the novel in that case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:

Given information:
- The first section has 291 pages (instead of 899 pages).
- The second section has 48 pages.

We need to find the total number of pages in the two sections.

Step 1: Add the number of pages in the first section and the second section.
Number of pages in the first section + Number of pages in the second section = Total number of pages in the two sections
291 + 48 = 339

Therefore, if the first section had 291 pages instead of 899 pages, and the second section had 48 pages, there would have been a total of 339 pages in the two sections of the novel.

### Answer: 339

Expected answer: 339

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a faraway galaxy, there are 312 billion stars. Recently, astronomers discovered another 134 billion stars in the same galaxy. How many billion stars are there in total in this galaxy?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of stars already known in the galaxy and the number of newly discovered stars.

Given information:
- There are 312 billion stars in the galaxy.
- Astronomers discovered another 134 billion stars in the same galaxy.

Step 1: Add the number of stars already known and the number of newly discovered stars.
Number of stars already known + Number of newly discovered stars = Total number of stars
312 billion + 134 billion = 446 billion

Therefore, there are 446 billion stars in total in this galaxy.

### Answer: 446

Expected answer: 446

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a faraway galaxy, there were initially thought to be 672 billion stars. However, recently, astronomers using a powerful telescope discovered another 134 billion stars in an unobserved section of the same galaxy. Given these new findings, how many billion stars are now known to exist in this galaxy?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the initial number of stars known in the galaxy and the number of newly discovered stars.

Given information:
- Initially, there were thought to be 672 billion stars in the galaxy.
- Astronomers discovered another 134 billion stars in an unobserved section of the same galaxy.

Step 1: Add the initial number of stars known and the number of newly discovered stars.
Initial number of stars known + Number of newly discovered stars = Total number of stars now known
672 billion + 134 billion = 806 billion

Therefore, with the new findings, it is now known that there are 806 billion stars in this galaxy.

### Answer: 806

Expected answer: 806

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At the local circus, there are 120 clowns performing in the afternoon show. In the evening show, there are 350 clowns performing. How many clowns perform in total for the day at the circus?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of clowns performing in both the afternoon and evening shows.

Given information:
- There are 120 clowns performing in the afternoon show.
- There are 350 clowns performing in the evening show.

Step 1: Find the total number of clowns performing in both shows.
Total number of clowns = Number of clowns in the afternoon show + Number of clowns in the evening show
Total number of clowns = 120 + 350
Total number of clowns = 470

Therefore, the total number of clowns performing in the day at the circus is 470.

### Answer: 470

Expected answer: 470

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: At the local circus, there are 120 clowns performing in the afternoon show. In the evening show, there are 350 clowns performing. After the first day, however, 361 clowns had to leave due to other commitments. How many clowns are left to perform for the remaining days at the circus?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of clowns performing on the first day and then subtract the number of clowns who left after the first day.

Given information:
- There are 120 clowns performing in the afternoon show.
- There are 350 clowns performing in the evening show.
- 361 clowns had to leave after the first day.

Step 1: Find the total number of clowns performing on the first day.
Total number of clowns on the first day = Number of clowns in the afternoon show + Number of clowns in the evening show
Total number of clowns on the first day = 120 + 350
Total number of clowns on the first day = 470

Step 2: Find the number of clowns left after 361 clowns left.
Number of clowns left = Total number of clowns on the first day - Number of clowns who left
Number of clowns left = 470 - 361
Number of clowns left = 109

Therefore, 109 clowns are left to perform for the remaining days at the circus.

### Answer: 109

Expected answer: 109

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the initial scenario, there were 120 clowns performing in the afternoon show at the circus. However, let's consider what would happen if there were actually 173 clowns in the afternoon show instead of 120. The number of clowns in the evening show remains the same, that is, 350. How many clowns would be performing in total for the day at the circus under this new scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's consider the new scenario where there are 173 clowns performing in the afternoon show instead of 120, and the number of clowns in the evening show remains the same at 350.

Given information:
- There are 173 clowns performing in the afternoon show.
- There are 350 clowns performing in the evening show.

Step 1: Find the total number of clowns performing in both shows.
Total number of clowns = Number of clowns in the afternoon show + Number of clowns in the evening show
Total number of clowns = 173 + 350
Total number of clowns = 523

Therefore, under the new scenario, the total number of clowns performing in the day at the circus would be 523.

### Answer: 523

Expected answer: 523

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A helicopter company initially had 309 helicopters. They decided to expand their fleet and purchased an additional 174 helicopters. How many helicopters does the company have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of helicopters the company has after purchasing the additional helicopters.

Given information:
- The helicopter company initially had 309 helicopters.
- The company purchased an additional 174 helicopters.

To find the total number of helicopters, we need to add the initial number of helicopters and the number of additional helicopters purchased.

Total number of helicopters = Initial number of helicopters + Additional helicopters purchased
Total number of helicopters = 309 + 174
Total number of helicopters = 483

Therefore, the helicopter company now has 483 helicopters.

### Answer: 483

Expected answer: 483

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Considering that initially, the helicopter company had 71 helicopters instead of 309, and they still purchased an additional 174 helicopters, how many helicopters does the company have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the updated initial number of helicopters.

Given information:
- The helicopter company initially had 71 helicopters.
- The company purchased an additional 174 helicopters.

To find the total number of helicopters, we need to add the initial number of helicopters and the number of additional helicopters purchased.

Total number of helicopters = Initial number of helicopters + Additional helicopters purchased
Total number of helicopters = 71 + 174
Total number of helicopters = 245

Therefore, with the updated initial number of 71 helicopters and the purchase of an additional 174 helicopters, the helicopter company now has 245 helicopters.

### Answer: 245

Expected answer: 245

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A sunglasses company started with 140 pairs of sunglasses. Over the summer, 79 pairs were sold. How many pairs of sunglasses does the company have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of pairs of sunglasses and the number of pairs sold.

Given information:
- The sunglasses company started with 140 pairs of sunglasses.
- Over the summer, 79 pairs were sold.

Step 1: Find the number of pairs of sunglasses left.
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = Initial number of pairs - Number of pairs sold
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = 140 - 79
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = 61

Therefore, the sunglasses company has 61 pairs of sunglasses left.

### Answer: 61

Expected answer: 61

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After selling 79 pairs of sunglasses from their initial stock of 140, the sunglasses company added 288 new pairs to their inventory for the next season. How many pairs of sunglasses does the company now have in stock?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of pairs of sunglasses left after selling 79 pairs from the initial stock of 140, and then add the new pairs of sunglasses to the remaining stock.

Given information:
- The sunglasses company started with 140 pairs of sunglasses.
- Over the summer, 79 pairs were sold.
- The company added 288 new pairs to their inventory for the next season.

Step 1: Find the number of pairs of sunglasses left after selling 79 pairs.
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = Initial number of pairs - Number of pairs sold
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = 140 - 79
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = 61

Step 2: Find the total number of pairs of sunglasses after adding the new pairs.
Total number of pairs of sunglasses = Number of pairs of sunglasses left + Number of new pairs added
Total number of pairs of sunglasses = 61 + 288
Total number of pairs of sunglasses = 349

Therefore, the sunglasses company now has 349 pairs of sunglasses in stock.

### Answer: 349

Expected answer: 349

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reevaluating their records, the sunglasses company noted that they initially had 812 pairs, not 140 pairs. If they still sold the same number of sunglasses (79 pairs), how many pairs of sunglasses would they have left then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the updated initial number of pairs of sunglasses and the number of pairs sold.

Given information:
- The sunglasses company initially had 812 pairs of sunglasses (updated information).
- Over the summer, 79 pairs were sold (same as before).

Step 1: Find the number of pairs of sunglasses left.
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = Updated initial number of pairs - Number of pairs sold
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = 812 - 79
Number of pairs of sunglasses left = 733

Therefore, with the updated initial number of 812 pairs and the same number of pairs sold (79), the sunglasses company would have 733 pairs of sunglasses left.

### Answer: 733

Expected answer: 733

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A clothing store has a collection of 89 shirts of Brand X. They've added 707 new shirts of Brand Y to their collection. How many shirts does the store now have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of shirts the store has after adding the new shirts of Brand Y to their existing collection of shirts of Brand X.

Given information:
- The store initially had 89 shirts of Brand X.
- The store added 707 new shirts of Brand Y.

Step 1: Find the total number of shirts by adding the number of shirts of Brand X and Brand Y.
Total number of shirts = Number of shirts of Brand X + Number of shirts of Brand Y
Total number of shirts = 89 + 707
Total number of shirts = 796

Therefore, the store now has a total of 796 shirts after adding the new shirts of Brand Y to their collection.

### Answer: 796

Expected answer: 796

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing their inventory, the store realizes they have a total of 980 shirts. Given the number of Brand X and Brand Y shirts they have, how many shirts does the store have that are not of Brand X or Brand Y?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of shirts that are not of Brand X or Brand Y by subtracting the total number of Brand X and Brand Y shirts from the total number of shirts in the store.

Given information:
- The store has a total of 980 shirts.
- The store has 89 shirts of Brand X.
- The store has 707 shirts of Brand Y.

Step 1: Find the total number of Brand X and Brand Y shirts.
Total number of Brand X and Brand Y shirts = Number of Brand X shirts + Number of Brand Y shirts
Total number of Brand X and Brand Y shirts = 89 + 707
Total number of Brand X and Brand Y shirts = 796

Step 2: Find the number of shirts that are not of Brand X or Brand Y.
Number of shirts not of Brand X or Brand Y = Total number of shirts - Total number of Brand X and Brand Y shirts
Number of shirts not of Brand X or Brand Y = 980 - 796
Number of shirts not of Brand X or Brand Y = 184

Therefore, the store has 184 shirts that are not of Brand X or Brand Y.

### Answer: 184

Expected answer: 184

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, instead of having 707 Brand Y shirts, the store had 813 Brand Y shirts. How many shirts does the store now have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, the store initially had 89 shirts of Brand X, and they added 813 new shirts of Brand Y.

Given information:
- The store initially had 89 shirts of Brand X.
- The store added 813 new shirts of Brand Y.

To find the total number of shirts the store now has, we need to add the number of shirts of Brand X and Brand Y.

Step 1: Find the total number of shirts by adding the number of shirts of Brand X and Brand Y.
Total number of shirts = Number of shirts of Brand X + Number of shirts of Brand Y
Total number of shirts = 89 + 813
Total number of shirts = 902

Therefore, with the addition of 813 new shirts of Brand Y, the store now has a total of 902 shirts.

### Answer: 902

Expected answer: 902

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were initially 400 butterflies in the large butterfly garden. Later in the season, a bird preyed on 321 of them. How many butterflies are remaining in the garden?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of butterflies and the number of butterflies preyed on by the bird.

Given information:
- There were initially 400 butterflies in the large butterfly garden.
- A bird preyed on 321 butterflies.

Step 1: Find the number of butterflies remaining in the garden.
Number of butterflies remaining = Initial number of butterflies - Number of butterflies preyed on
Number of butterflies remaining = 400 - 321
Number of butterflies remaining = 79

Therefore, there are 79 butterflies remaining in the garden.

### Answer: 79

Expected answer: 79

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a marina, there are 729 boats. After a storm, 133 boats were damaged beyond repair and had to be removed. How many boats are left in the marina?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of boats that were damaged beyond repair from the total number of boats in the marina.

Given information:
- There are 729 boats in the marina.
- 133 boats were damaged beyond repair and had to be removed.

Step 1: Subtract the number of damaged boats from the total number of boats.
Number of boats left in the marina = Total number of boats - Number of damaged boats
Number of boats left in the marina = 729 - 133
Number of boats left in the marina = 596

Therefore, after the storm, there are 596 boats left in the marina.

### Answer: 596

Expected answer: 596

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario at the marina, let's consider a different event. Instead of a storm damaging 133 boats, suppose that a larger storm hit and damaged 511 boats. How many boats would be left in the marina under this new situation?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's consider the new scenario where a larger storm hit and damaged 511 boats.

Given information:
- There were originally 729 boats in the marina.
- 511 boats were damaged by the larger storm.

To find the number of boats left in the marina, we need to subtract the number of damaged boats from the original total number of boats.

Step 1: Subtract the number of damaged boats from the total number of boats.
Number of boats left in the marina = Total number of boats - Number of damaged boats
Number of boats left in the marina = 729 - 511
Number of boats left in the marina = 218

Therefore, if a larger storm hit and damaged 511 boats, there would be 218 boats left in the marina.

### Answer: 218

Expected answer: 218

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Train A is carrying 378 passengers and Train B is carrying 254 passengers. How many passengers are there in total on the two trains?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of passengers on Train A and Train B.

Given information:
- Train A is carrying 378 passengers.
- Train B is carrying 254 passengers.

Step 1: Add the number of passengers on Train A and Train B.
Number of passengers on Train A + Number of passengers on Train B = Total number of passengers
378 + 254 = 632

Therefore, there are 632 passengers in total on the two trains.

### Answer: 632

Expected answer: 632

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous situation, if 240 passengers got off at the next station from both trains combined, how many passengers are still on the two trains?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of passengers who got off from the total number of passengers on the two trains.

Given information:
- There were 632 passengers in total on the two trains.
- 240 passengers got off at the next station from both trains combined.

Step 1: Subtract the number of passengers who got off from the total number of passengers.
Total number of passengers - Number of passengers who got off = Remaining number of passengers
632 - 240 = 392

Therefore, there are 392 passengers still on the two trains after 240 passengers got off at the next station.

### Answer: 392

Expected answer: 392

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous situation, let's consider that Train A was actually carrying 231 passengers instead of 378. Keeping the number of passengers on Train B the same, how many passengers are there in total on the two trains now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the total number of passengers with the updated information.

Given information:
- Train A is carrying 231 passengers.
- Train B is carrying 254 passengers.

Step 1: Add the number of passengers on Train A and Train B.
Number of passengers on Train A + Number of passengers on Train B = Total number of passengers
231 + 254 = 485

Therefore, with Train A carrying 231 passengers and Train B carrying 254 passengers, there are 485 passengers in total on the two trains.

### Answer: 485

Expected answer: 485

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The number 892 is special because it has been touched by a magic spell. After the magic spell, it lost 172 from its count. What is the number now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract 172 from the original number 892.

Given information:
- The original number is 892.
- The number lost 172 after being touched by a magic spell.

Step 1: Subtract 172 from 892.
892 - 172 = 720

Therefore, after the magic spell, the number is now 720.

### Answer: 720

Expected answer: 720

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the magic spell, the number 892 becomes another number after losing 172 from its count. Another magical number, which is 896, also undergoes the same magic and loses exactly as much as what the previous number has become. What is the count of this new number?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* The original number is 892
* After losing 172, it becomes 892 - 172 = 720
* Another number, 896, loses the same amount as what 892 became (720)

So, we need to find out what 896 becomes after losing 720.

Given:
- Original number = 896
- Amount to be lost = 720

Step 1: Subtract the amount to be lost from the original number.
896 - 720 = 176

Therefore, after losing the same amount as what 892 became (720), the new number is 176.

### Answer: 176

Expected answer: 176

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Recalling the magic spell cast on the number 892 from our previous problem, imagine that the spell was slightly different and it only lost 776 from its count instead of losing as much as the previous number had become. What does the number 892 become now under the effect of this new magic spell?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's think through this step-by-step:
* The original number is 892
* The new magic spell makes the number lose 776 from its count
* To find the new number, we subtract 776 from 892
* 892 - 776 = 116

Therefore, under the effect of this new magic spell, the number 892 becomes 116.

### Answer: 116

Expected answer: 116

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A furniture factory produced 642 tables in a month. However, due to quality issues, they had to discard 544 of them. How many tables remained from that month's production?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of tables produced and the number of tables discarded due to quality issues.

Given information:
- The furniture factory produced 642 tables in a month.
- They had to discard 544 tables due to quality issues.

Step 1: Find the number of tables that remained after discarding the defective ones.
Number of tables remaining = Total tables produced - Number of tables discarded
Number of tables remaining = 642 - 544
Number of tables remaining = 98

Therefore, 98 tables remained from that month's production after discarding the defective ones.

### Answer: 98

Expected answer: 98

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the issue was resolved, the furniture factory was able to produce an additional 329 tables that month. How many tables were produced in total that month, including both the initial and the additional production?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the initial production and the additional production.

Given information:
- The furniture factory initially produced 642 tables.
- After discarding 544 defective tables, 98 tables remained from the initial production.
- The factory was able to produce an additional 329 tables after resolving the issue.

Step 1: Find the total number of tables produced in that month.
Total tables produced = Tables remaining from initial production + Additional tables produced
Total tables produced = 98 + 329
Total tables produced = 427

Therefore, the furniture factory produced a total of 427 tables in that month, including both the initial and the additional production.

### Answer: 427

Expected answer: 427

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, suppose that the furniture factory had initially produced 824 tables instead of 642. After discarding the same number of faulty tables (544), how many tables would have remained from that month's production?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, we need to find the number of tables that remained after discarding 544 faulty tables from an initial production of 824 tables.

Given information:
- The furniture factory initially produced 824 tables.
- They had to discard 544 tables due to quality issues.

Step 1: Find the number of tables that remained after discarding the defective ones.
Number of tables remaining = Total tables produced - Number of tables discarded
Number of tables remaining = 824 - 544
Number of tables remaining = 280

Therefore, if the furniture factory had initially produced 824 tables and discarded 544 faulty tables, 280 tables would have remained from that month's production.

### Answer: 280

Expected answer: 280

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the art class, there are initially 91 colored pencils available. Then, another batch of 738 colored pencils is added to the stock. How many colored pencils are there in the art class now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of colored pencils after adding the new batch to the initial stock.

Given information:
- Initially, there are 91 colored pencils available in the art class.
- Another batch of 738 colored pencils is added to the stock.

To find the total number of colored pencils, we need to add the initial stock and the new batch.

Total number of colored pencils = Initial stock + New batch
Total number of colored pencils = 91 + 738
Total number of colored pencils = 829

Therefore, after adding the new batch of 738 colored pencils, there are now 829 colored pencils in the art class.

### Answer: 829

Expected answer: 829

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following up from the last problem, suppose the art class receives an additional donation of 67 colored pencils after the previous batch. How many colored pencils are there in the art class now with the additional set?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Initially, there were 91 colored pencils in the art class.
Then, a batch of 738 colored pencils was added.
So, the total number of colored pencils became:
91 + 738 = 829 colored pencils

Now, we are given that an additional donation of 67 colored pencils was received.
To find the new total, we need to add this additional donation to the previous total.

Previous total: 829 colored pencils
Additional donation: 67 colored pencils
New total = Previous total + Additional donation
New total = 829 + 67
New total = 896 colored pencils

Therefore, after receiving the additional donation of 67 colored pencils, there are now 896 colored pencils in the art class.

### Answer: 896

Expected answer: 896

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Melanie started with 518 beads in her bead box. She used 257 beads to make a special necklace for her mother. How many beads does she have left in her bead box?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of beads and the number of beads used to make the necklace.

Given information:
- Melanie started with 518 beads in her bead box.
- She used 257 beads to make a necklace for her mother.

Step 1: Find the number of beads left in the bead box.
Number of beads left = Initial number of beads - Number of beads used
Number of beads left = 518 - 257
Number of beads left = 261

Therefore, Melanie has 261 beads left in her bead box.

### Answer: 261

Expected answer: 261

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After making the special necklace for her mother, Melanie found another box of beads she forgot she had. In this box, there were 551 beads. How many beads does she have in total now, including those from the recently discovered box?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the number of beads left in the original bead box and the number of beads in the recently discovered box.

Given information:
- Melanie had 261 beads left in her original bead box after making the necklace for her mother.
- Melanie found another box with 551 beads.

Step 1: Find the total number of beads Melanie has now.
Total number of beads = Number of beads left in the original bead box + Number of beads in the recently discovered box
Total number of beads = 261 + 551
Total number of beads = 812

Therefore, Melanie has a total of 812 beads now, including those from the recently discovered box.

### Answer: 812

Expected answer: 812

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The helicopter manufacturing company, Helitech Inc, built 457 helicopters last year. This year, they have already produced 334 more helicopters. How many helicopters does Helitech Inc have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of helicopters Helitech Inc. has produced by adding the number of helicopters they built last year and the additional helicopters they have produced this year.

Given information:
- Helitech Inc. built 457 helicopters last year.
- Helitech Inc. has already produced 334 more helicopters this year.

Step 1: Find the total number of helicopters produced by adding the number of helicopters built last year and the additional helicopters produced this year.
Total number of helicopters = Number of helicopters built last year + Additional helicopters produced this year
Total number of helicopters = 457 + 334
Total number of helicopters = 791

Therefore, Helitech Inc. has a total of 791 helicopters.

### Answer: 791

Expected answer: 791

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After a thorough check, it was found out that 275 helicopters from Helitech Inc's total count were too old and needed to be decommissioned. How many helicopters does Helitech Inc have now after decommissioning the old ones?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of helicopters Helitech Inc. has after decommissioning the old helicopters.

Given information:
- Helitech Inc. had a total of 791 helicopters before decommissioning.
- 275 helicopters were too old and needed to be decommissioned.

Step 1: Find the number of helicopters remaining after decommissioning the old ones.
Number of helicopters remaining = Total number of helicopters - Number of helicopters decommissioned
Number of helicopters remaining = 791 - 275
Number of helicopters remaining = 516

Therefore, after decommissioning the old helicopters, Helitech Inc. has 516 helicopters remaining.

### Answer: 516

Expected answer: 516

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: If a big square has 182 units and a smaller square has 459 units, how many units do the two squares have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the units of the big square and the smaller square.

Given information:
- The big square has 182 units.
- The smaller square has 459 units.

Step 1: Add the units of the big square and the smaller square.
Units of the big square + Units of the smaller square = Total units of both squares
182 units + 459 units = 641 units

Therefore, the two squares have a total of 641 units.

### Answer: 641

Expected answer: 641

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous problem, if they decide to remove 377 units from the total, how many units would remain in the two squares combined?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In the previous problem, we found that the total units of the two squares (big square with 182 units and smaller square with 459 units) is 641 units.

Given information:
- Total units of the two squares = 641 units
- They decide to remove 377 units from the total

To find the remaining units in the two squares combined, we need to subtract the units removed from the total units.

Step 1: Subtract the units removed from the total units.
Total units - Units removed = Remaining units
641 units - 377 units = 264 units

Therefore, if they remove 377 units from the total, 264 units would remain in the two squares combined.

### Answer: 264

Expected answer: 264

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Given the previous problem, suppose instead that the big square initially had 182 units and the smaller square had 557 units rather than 459. How many units would the two squares have in total then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- The big square has 182 units.
- The smaller square has 557 units.

To find the total units of both squares, we need to add the units of the big square and the smaller square.

Step 1: Add the units of the big square and the smaller square.
Units of the big square + Units of the smaller square = Total units of both squares
182 units + 557 units = 739 units

Therefore, with the updated information, the two squares would have a total of 739 units.

### Answer: 739

Expected answer: 739

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: You have 117 bottles of juice in your store. You decided to start selling a new flavor and you added 2 more bottles of this new kind to your collection. How many bottles of juice do you now have in your store?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of bottles after adding the new flavor.

Given information:
- Initially, there are 117 bottles of juice in the store.
- 2 more bottles of the new flavor are added to the collection.

To find the total number of bottles after adding the new flavor, we need to add the initial number of bottles and the number of new bottles.

Total number of bottles = Initial number of bottles + Number of new bottles
Total number of bottles = 117 + 2
Total number of bottles = 119

Therefore, after adding the 2 bottles of the new flavor, there are now 119 bottles of juice in the store.

### Answer: 119

Expected answer: 119

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the morning, you noticed that you had a total of 471 bottles of juice in your store. At the end of the day, after selling some bottles and also adding some new ones as described before, you want to find out how many bottles you sold. How many bottles did you sell over the day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of bottles sold during the day.

Given information:
- In the morning, there were 471 bottles of juice in the store.
- At the end of the day, after selling some bottles and adding 2 new bottles, there were 119 bottles in the store.

To find the number of bottles sold, we need to subtract the final number of bottles from the initial number of bottles, and then add the number of new bottles added.

Number of bottles sold = Initial number of bottles - Final number of bottles + Number of new bottles added
Number of bottles sold = 471 - 119 + 2
Number of bottles sold = 354

Therefore, you sold 354 bottles of juice over the day.

### Answer: 354

Expected answer: 352

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: You have a total of 885 TV episodes to binge watch. If you've already watched 157 episodes, how many episodes do you have left to watch?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of episodes already watched from the total number of episodes.

Given information:
- Total number of TV episodes to binge watch = 885
- Number of episodes already watched = 157

Number of episodes left to watch = Total episodes - Episodes already watched
Number of episodes left to watch = 885 - 157
Number of episodes left to watch = 728

### Answer: 728

Expected answer: 728

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After completing the 157 episodes, you discover an additional 208 episodes that were not accounted for in your original total. How many episodes do you have left to watch now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Original total number of episodes: 885
* Episodes already watched: 157
* Additional episodes discovered: 208

First, we need to calculate the number of episodes left after watching 157 episodes from the original total of 885:
* Episodes left after watching 157: 885 - 157 = 728

Now, we need to add the additional 208 episodes to the remaining episodes:
* New total of remaining episodes: 728 + 208 = 936

Therefore, after discovering the additional 208 episodes, you now have 936 episodes left to watch.

### Answer: 936

Expected answer: 936

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Imagine initially there were actually just 648 TV episodes, not 885. Given that you have already watched 157 episodes, how many episodes do you have left to watch now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- Total number of TV episodes = 648
- Number of episodes already watched = 157

Number of episodes left to watch = Total episodes - Episodes already watched
Number of episodes left to watch = 648 - 157
Number of episodes left to watch = 491

### Answer: 491

Expected answer: 491

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A glassmaker has 330 regular sized windows and decides to make 642 additional larger windows for a commercial order. How many windows does the glassmaker have after completing this order?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of windows the glassmaker has after completing the commercial order.

Given information:
- The glassmaker initially has 330 regular-sized windows.
- The glassmaker decides to make 642 additional larger windows for a commercial order.

Step 1: Find the total number of windows after completing the commercial order.
Total number of windows = Initial number of regular-sized windows + Number of additional larger windows
Total number of windows = 330 + 642
Total number of windows = 972

Therefore, after completing the commercial order, the glassmaker has a total of 972 windows.

### Answer: 972

Expected answer: 972

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the glassmaker completes the commercial order, there are additional orders to be filled. One of the clients returns 604 windows because they were the incorrect size. Now, how many windows does the glassmaker have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of windows the glassmaker has after completing the commercial order and subtracting the returned windows.

Given information:
- The glassmaker initially had 330 regular-sized windows.
- The glassmaker made 642 additional larger windows for a commercial order.
- After completing the commercial order, the glassmaker had a total of 972 windows.
- One of the clients returned 604 windows because they were the incorrect size.

Step 1: Find the total number of windows after subtracting the returned windows.
Total number of windows = Total number of windows after completing the commercial order - Number of returned windows
Total number of windows = 972 - 604
Total number of windows = 368

Therefore, after completing the commercial order and subtracting the returned windows, the glassmaker has a total of 368 windows.

### Answer: 368

Expected answer: 368

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the glassmaker originally had 126 regular sized windows instead of 330, and they still made 642 additional larger windows for the commercial order. How many windows would the glassmaker have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The glassmaker originally had 126 regular-sized windows.
- The glassmaker made 642 additional larger windows for a commercial order.

Step 1: Find the total number of windows after completing the commercial order.
Total number of windows = Initial number of regular-sized windows + Number of additional larger windows
Total number of windows = 126 + 642
Total number of windows = 768

Therefore, if the glassmaker originally had 126 regular-sized windows and made 642 additional larger windows for the commercial order, the glassmaker would have a total of 768 windows after completing the order.

### Answer: 768

Expected answer: 768

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A computer factory produced 722 computers in one week. After delivering to various shops, the factory had 581 computers left. How many computers did they deliver to the shops?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of computers produced and the number of computers left at the factory after delivery.

Given information:
- The computer factory produced 722 computers in one week.
- After delivering to various shops, the factory had 581 computers left.

Step 1: Find the number of computers delivered to the shops.
Number of computers delivered = Total computers produced - Computers left at the factory
Number of computers delivered = 722 - 581

Step 2: Calculate the number of computers delivered.
Number of computers delivered = 722 - 581
Number of computers delivered = 141

Therefore, the computer factory delivered 141 computers to the shops.

### Answer: 141

Expected answer: 141

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In the magical land of fairies, there were initially 547 fairies. But one day, a wicked witch cursed 313 of them and they disappeared. How many fairies are left in the magical land now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of fairies that disappeared due to the witch's curse from the initial number of fairies.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 547 fairies in the magical land.
- The wicked witch cursed 313 fairies, and they disappeared.

Step 1: Subtract the number of fairies that disappeared from the initial number of fairies.
Number of fairies left = Initial number of fairies - Number of fairies that disappeared
Number of fairies left = 547 - 313
Number of fairies left = 234

Therefore, there are 234 fairies left in the magical land after the witch's curse.

### Answer: 234

Expected answer: 234

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario, what if the wicked witch's curse had caused 297 fairies to disappear instead of 313? How many fairies would be left in the magical land then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 547 fairies in the magical land.
- The wicked witch cursed 297 fairies, and they disappeared.

Step 1: Subtract the number of fairies that disappeared from the initial number of fairies.
Number of fairies left = Initial number of fairies - Number of fairies that disappeared
Number of fairies left = 547 - 297
Number of fairies left = 250

Therefore, if the wicked witch's curse had caused 297 fairies to disappear instead of 313, there would be 250 fairies left in the magical land.

### Answer: 250

Expected answer: 250

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were originally 224 oranges in a fruit store. Then, a fresh batch of 696 oranges was brought in from the farm. How many oranges are there in the store now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of oranges in the store after the fresh batch was brought in.

Given information:
- There were originally 224 oranges in the fruit store.
- A fresh batch of 696 oranges was brought in from the farm.

To find the total number of oranges, we need to add the original number of oranges and the number of oranges in the fresh batch.

Total number of oranges = Original number of oranges + Number of oranges in the fresh batch
Total number of oranges = 224 + 696
Total number of oranges = 920

Therefore, there are 920 oranges in the store now.

### Answer: 920

Expected answer: 920

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After some time, due to some oranges becoming overripe, the store owner had to discard 271 oranges. How many oranges are left in the store now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of oranges left in the store after discarding the overripe ones.

Given information:
- There were originally 920 oranges in the store.
- The store owner had to discard 271 overripe oranges.

To find the number of oranges left, we need to subtract the number of discarded oranges from the original number of oranges.

Number of oranges left = Original number of oranges - Number of discarded oranges
Number of oranges left = 920 - 271
Number of oranges left = 649

Therefore, there are 649 oranges left in the store now.

### Answer: 649

Expected answer: 649

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's suppose that there were originally 224 oranges in the fruit store. However, instead of receiving a fresh batch of 696 oranges from the farm, they only receive a batch of 356 oranges. How many oranges are there in the store now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- There were originally 224 oranges in the fruit store.
- A fresh batch of 356 oranges was brought in from the farm.

To find the total number of oranges, we need to add the original number of oranges and the number of oranges in the fresh batch.

Total number of oranges = Original number of oranges + Number of oranges in the fresh batch
Total number of oranges = 224 + 356
Total number of oranges = 580

Therefore, with the fresh batch of 356 oranges, there are now 580 oranges in the store.

### Answer: 580

Expected answer: 580

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: You're organizing a bedtime event and have 628 bed-sheets available at the start. After accommodating some participants, you used up 143 bed-sheets. How many bed-sheets are left for the remaining portion of the event?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of bed-sheets available at the start and the number of bed-sheets used.

Given information:
- Total number of bed-sheets available at the start = 628
- Number of bed-sheets used = 143

Step 1: Subtract the number of bed-sheets used from the total number of bed-sheets available.
Number of bed-sheets left = Total bed-sheets available - Number of bed-sheets used
Number of bed-sheets left = 628 - 143
Number of bed-sheets left = 485

Therefore, 485 bed-sheets are left for the remaining portion of the event.

### Answer: 485

Expected answer: 485

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: You're organizing a bedtime event and have 628 bed-sheets available at the start. After accommodating some participants, you used up 143 bed-sheets. Later in the day, a generous donation of 223 additional bed-sheets was received. How many bed-sheets do you now have for the remaining portion of the event?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of bed-sheets left after accommodating some participants, and then add the number of bed-sheets received from the donation.

Given information:
- Total number of bed-sheets available at the start = 628
- Number of bed-sheets used = 143
- Number of bed-sheets received from the donation = 223

Step 1: Find the number of bed-sheets left after accommodating some participants.
Number of bed-sheets left = Total bed-sheets available - Number of bed-sheets used
Number of bed-sheets left = 628 - 143
Number of bed-sheets left = 485

Step 2: Add the number of bed-sheets received from the donation to the number of bed-sheets left.
Total number of bed-sheets now available = Number of bed-sheets left + Number of bed-sheets received from the donation
Total number of bed-sheets now available = 485 + 223
Total number of bed-sheets now available = 708

Therefore, you now have 708 bed-sheets for the remaining portion of the event.

### Answer: 708

Expected answer: 708

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Recall that you were organizing a bedtime event and initially had 628 bed-sheets. Let's change that. Say, you had actually started with 896 bed-sheets instead of 628 and the rest of the scenario remains the same. After accommodating some participants, you used up 143 bed-sheets. How many bed-sheets would you have left then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- Total number of bed-sheets available at the start = 896
- Number of bed-sheets used = 143

Step 1: Subtract the number of bed-sheets used from the total number of bed-sheets available.
Number of bed-sheets left = Total bed-sheets available - Number of bed-sheets used
Number of bed-sheets left = 896 - 143
Number of bed-sheets left = 753

Therefore, with the updated information of starting with 896 bed-sheets and using 143 bed-sheets, you would have 753 bed-sheets left for the remaining portion of the event.

### Answer: 753

Expected answer: 753

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Amy is a jeweler and she has a collection of 877 earrings in her shop. She sold 31 earrings recently. How many earrings are left in her shop?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of earrings Amy had initially and the number of earrings she sold.

Given information:
- Amy had a collection of 877 earrings in her shop.
- Amy sold 31 earrings recently.

Step 1: Subtract the number of earrings sold from the initial number of earrings.
Number of earrings left = Initial number of earrings - Number of earrings sold
Number of earrings left = 877 - 31
Number of earrings left = 846

Therefore, after selling 31 earrings, Amy has 846 earrings left in her shop.

### Answer: 846

Expected answer: 846

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Amy the jeweler, after selling 31 earrings from her collection of 877, receives a new shipment of 33 earrings. How many earrings does she have in her shop now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of earrings Amy had left after selling 31 earrings, and then add the new shipment of 33 earrings to that number.

Given information:
- Amy initially had a collection of 877 earrings.
- Amy sold 31 earrings.
- Amy received a new shipment of 33 earrings.

Step 1: Find the number of earrings Amy had left after selling 31 earrings.
Number of earrings left after selling = Initial number of earrings - Number of earrings sold
Number of earrings left after selling = 877 - 31 = 846 earrings

Step 2: Add the new shipment of 33 earrings to the remaining earrings.
Total number of earrings now = Number of earrings left after selling + New shipment of earrings
Total number of earrings now = 846 + 33 = 879 earrings

Therefore, after receiving the new shipment of 33 earrings, Amy now has 879 earrings in her shop.

### Answer: 879

Expected answer: 879

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, suppose Amy initially had 440 earrings instead of 877. If she still sold 31 earrings as before, how many earrings are left in her shop now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- Amy initially had 440 earrings in her shop.
- Amy sold 31 earrings recently.

To find the number of earrings left in her shop, we need to subtract the number of earrings sold from the initial number of earrings.

Step 1: Subtract the number of earrings sold from the initial number of earrings.
Number of earrings left = Initial number of earrings - Number of earrings sold
Number of earrings left = 440 - 31
Number of earrings left = 409

Therefore, if Amy initially had 440 earrings and sold 31 earrings, she has 409 earrings left in her shop now.

### Answer: 409

Expected answer: 409

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Sarah has 207 erasers in her collection. In a recent collector's meet, she acquired an additional 590 erasers. How many erasers are there in Sarah's collection now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of erasers in Sarah's collection after acquiring the additional erasers.

Given information:
- Sarah initially had 207 erasers in her collection.
- Sarah acquired an additional 590 erasers at the collector's meet.

To find the total number of erasers, we need to add the initial number of erasers and the additional erasers acquired.

Total number of erasers = Initial number of erasers + Additional erasers acquired
Total number of erasers = 207 + 590
Total number of erasers = 797

Therefore, after acquiring the additional erasers, Sarah now has 797 erasers in her collection.

### Answer: 797

Expected answer: 797

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After counting her collection, Sarah decided to visit another collector's meet where she was able to add an extra 139 erasers to her growing collection. How many erasers does Sarah have in her collection now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Initially, Sarah had 207 erasers in her collection
* At the first collector's meet, she acquired 590 additional erasers
* So after the first meet, she had 207 + 590 = 797 erasers
* At the second collector's meet, she acquired 139 more erasers

To find the total number of erasers Sarah has now, we need to add the number of erasers she had after the first meet (797) to the number of erasers she acquired at the second meet (139).

797 + 139 = 936

Therefore, after the second collector's meet, Sarah now has 936 erasers in her collection.

### Answer: 936

Expected answer: 936

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing her eraser collection, Sarah realized she initially started with 292 erasers, not 207, before she acquired an additional 590 erasers at the first collector's meet. How many erasers did Sarah have in her collection after the first meet?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the updated information.

Given information:
- Sarah initially had 292 erasers in her collection.
- Sarah acquired an additional 590 erasers at the collector's meet.

To find the total number of erasers, we need to add the initial number of erasers and the additional erasers acquired.

Total number of erasers = Initial number of erasers + Additional erasers acquired
Total number of erasers = 292 + 590
Total number of erasers = 882

Therefore, after acquiring the additional 590 erasers at the first collector's meet, Sarah had 882 erasers in her collection.

### Answer: 882

Expected answer: 882

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a robotics competition, team Alpha has created 164 robot parts and team Beta has created 436 robot parts. How many robot parts have been created in total by both teams?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the robot parts created by team Alpha and team Beta.

Given information:
- Team Alpha has created 164 robot parts.
- Team Beta has created 436 robot parts.

Step 1: Find the total number of robot parts created by both teams.
Total robot parts created = Robot parts created by team Alpha + Robot parts created by team Beta
Total robot parts created = 164 + 436
Total robot parts created = 600

Therefore, the total number of robot parts created by both teams is 600.

### Answer: 600

Expected answer: 600

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the competition, they found out that there are originally 668 robot parts in total. How many robot parts are unaccounted for or missing from both teams' creations?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To find the number of robot parts that are unaccounted for or missing, we need to subtract the total number of robot parts created by both teams from the original total number of robot parts.

Given information:
- Total number of robot parts created by both teams = 164 + 436 = 600
- Original total number of robot parts = 668

Step 1: Find the number of robot parts unaccounted for or missing.
Number of robot parts unaccounted for or missing = Original total number of robot parts - Total number of robot parts created by both teams
Number of robot parts unaccounted for or missing = 668 - 600
Number of robot parts unaccounted for or missing = 68

Therefore, 68 robot parts are unaccounted for or missing from both teams' creations.

### Answer: 68

Expected answer: 68

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: If initially Team Alpha had only created 70 robot parts instead of 164, how many robot parts would have been created in total by both teams?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the robot parts created by team Alpha and team Beta, given that team Alpha initially created 70 robot parts instead of 164.

Given information:
- Team Alpha has created 70 robot parts (instead of 164).
- Team Beta has created 436 robot parts.

Step 1: Find the total number of robot parts created by both teams.
Total robot parts created = Robot parts created by team Alpha + Robot parts created by team Beta
Total robot parts created = 70 + 436
Total robot parts created = 506

Therefore, if team Alpha had initially created 70 robot parts instead of 164, the total number of robot parts created by both teams would have been 506.

### Answer: 506

Expected answer: 506

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The zoo had 427 animals last year. A few animals were exchanged with another zoo resulting in the number of animals becoming 341. How many animals did the zoo lose?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of animals and the final number of animals after the exchange.

Given information:
- The zoo had 427 animals last year.
- After the exchange with another zoo, the number of animals became 341.

Step 1: Find the difference between the initial and final number of animals.
Initial number of animals - Final number of animals = Number of animals lost
427 - 341 = 86

Therefore, the zoo lost 86 animals after the exchange.

### Answer: 86

Expected answer: 86

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The zoo had 427 animals last year. A few animals were exchanged with another zoo resulting in the number of animals becoming 341. How many animals did the zoo lose? Now, consider this: There were initially 848 animals in the reserve section of the zoo. Subtract the number of animals that the zoo lost from the animals in the reserve section. How many animals does that leave in the reserve section?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The zoo had 427 animals last year.
- After the exchange with another zoo, the number of animals became 341.
- There were initially 848 animals in the reserve section of the zoo.

Step 1: Find the number of animals the zoo lost.
Initial number of animals - Final number of animals = Number of animals lost
427 - 341 = 86

Step 2: Subtract the number of animals lost from the animals in the reserve section.
Animals in the reserve section - Animals lost = Remaining animals in the reserve section
848 - 86 = 762

Therefore, after the exchange, there are 762 animals left in the reserve section of the zoo.

### Answer: 762

Expected answer: 762

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: The city park initially had 164 trees. Unfortunately, due to a storm, 31 trees were knocked down and had to be removed. How many trees are left in the park now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of trees that were knocked down from the initial number of trees in the park.

Given information:
- The city park initially had 164 trees.
- 31 trees were knocked down and had to be removed.

Step 1: Subtract the number of trees knocked down from the initial number of trees.
Number of trees left = Initial number of trees - Number of trees knocked down
Number of trees left = 164 - 31
Number of trees left = 133

Therefore, there are 133 trees left in the park now.

### Answer: 133

Expected answer: 133

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing the park's records, it was found that the storm actually knocked down 61 trees, not 31. Given this corrected information, how many trees were left in the park after the storm?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the corrected information.

Given information:
- The city park initially had 164 trees.
- 61 trees were knocked down and had to be removed (corrected information).

Step 1: Subtract the number of trees knocked down from the initial number of trees.
Number of trees left = Initial number of trees - Number of trees knocked down
Number of trees left = 164 - 61
Number of trees left = 103

Therefore, with the corrected information that 61 trees were knocked down, there are 103 trees left in the park after the storm.

### Answer: 103

Expected answer: 103

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A company makes 214 winter blankets for a homeless shelter. The same company also donates 721 summer blankets. How many blankets did the company make in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of blankets made by the company by adding the number of winter blankets and summer blankets.

Given information:
- The company made 214 winter blankets for a homeless shelter.
- The company donated 721 summer blankets.

Step 1: Find the total number of blankets made by the company.
Total number of blankets = Number of winter blankets + Number of summer blankets
Total number of blankets = 214 + 721
Total number of blankets = 935

Therefore, the company made a total of 935 blankets.

### Answer: 935

Expected answer: 935

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous scenario, the company now has to use 402 blankets for safety and quality testing. How many blankets are left with the company now for donation?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of blankets left with the company after using 402 blankets for safety and quality testing.

Given information:
- The company made a total of 935 blankets.
- The company has to use 402 blankets for safety and quality testing.

Step 1: Find the number of blankets left with the company after using 402 blankets for testing.
Number of blankets left = Total number of blankets - Number of blankets used for testing
Number of blankets left = 935 - 402
Number of blankets left = 533

Therefore, after using 402 blankets for safety and quality testing, the company has 533 blankets left for donation.

### Answer: 533

Expected answer: 533

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Imagine if instead of making 214 winter blankets, the company had actually made 722 winter blankets, but the number of summer blankets remained the same as 214. How many blankets did the company make in total in this case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The company made 722 winter blankets.
- The company donated 721 summer blankets.

To find the total number of blankets made by the company, we need to add the number of winter blankets and summer blankets.

Step 1: Find the total number of blankets made by the company.
Total number of blankets = Number of winter blankets + Number of summer blankets
Total number of blankets = 722 + 721
Total number of blankets = 1443

Therefore, if the company made 722 winter blankets and 721 summer blankets, the total number of blankets made by the company would be 1443.

### Answer: 1443

Expected answer: 936

Correct? No

🔗 Problem

Problem: A warehouse had 107 doors initially. However, due to renovation, 32 doors were removed. How many doors are there in the warehouse now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of doors removed from the initial number of doors in the warehouse.

Given information:
- The warehouse initially had 107 doors.
- 32 doors were removed during the renovation.

Step 1: Subtract the number of doors removed from the initial number of doors.
Number of doors remaining = Initial number of doors - Number of doors removed
Number of doors remaining = 107 - 32
Number of doors remaining = 75

Therefore, after the renovation, there are 75 doors in the warehouse.

### Answer: 75

Expected answer: 75

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Given the previous scenario, suppose that the first warehouse initially had 74 doors instead of 107 and still removed 32 doors for renovation. How many doors would be left in that case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The warehouse initially had 74 doors.
- 32 doors were removed during the renovation.

Step 1: Subtract the number of doors removed from the initial number of doors.
Number of doors remaining = Initial number of doors - Number of doors removed
Number of doors remaining = 74 - 32
Number of doors remaining = 42

Therefore, if the warehouse initially had 74 doors and 32 doors were removed during the renovation, there would be 42 doors left in the warehouse.

### Answer: 42

Expected answer: 42

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer harvested 521 oranges from one of his trees and 307 from another. How many oranges did he harvest in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of oranges harvested from the two trees.

Given information:
- The farmer harvested 521 oranges from one tree.
- The farmer harvested 307 oranges from another tree.

Step 1: Add the number of oranges harvested from both trees.
Number of oranges harvested from the first tree + Number of oranges harvested from the second tree = Total number of oranges harvested
521 + 307 = 828

Therefore, the farmer harvested a total of 828 oranges from the two trees.

### Answer: 828

Expected answer: 828

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous scenario, the farmer ended up selling 213 of the harvested oranges at a local market. How many oranges does he have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of oranges the farmer sold from the total number of oranges he harvested.

Given information:
- The farmer harvested a total of 828 oranges.
- The farmer sold 213 oranges at a local market.

Step 1: Subtract the number of oranges sold from the total number of oranges harvested.
Total number of oranges harvested - Number of oranges sold = Number of oranges left
828 - 213 = 615

Therefore, the farmer has 615 oranges left after selling 213 oranges at the local market.

### Answer: 615

Expected answer: 615

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Recall the previous situation where the farmer harvested oranges. Instead, imagine he initially harvested 521 oranges, but this time from his orange tree, he harvested only 174 more. Now, how many oranges did he harvest in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's look at the new information:

* Initially, the farmer harvested 521 oranges
* From the orange tree, he harvested 174 more oranges

To find the total number of oranges harvested, we need to add the initial harvest and the additional harvest from the orange tree.

Given information:
- Initial harvest: 521 oranges
- Additional harvest from the orange tree: 174 oranges

Step 1: Add the initial harvest and the additional harvest.
Initial harvest + Additional harvest = Total oranges harvested
521 + 174 = 695

Therefore, the farmer harvested a total of 695 oranges.

### Answer: 695

Expected answer: 695

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A cat shelter has 550 regular cats and recently rescued an additional 130 cats. How many cats does the shelter have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of regular cats and the number of recently rescued cats.

Given information:
- The cat shelter has 550 regular cats.
- The cat shelter recently rescued an additional 130 cats.

Step 1: Add the number of regular cats and the number of recently rescued cats.
Number of regular cats + Number of recently rescued cats = Total number of cats in the shelter
550 + 130 = 680

Therefore, the cat shelter has a total of 680 cats now.

### Answer: 680

Expected answer: 680

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: During the winter season, a local cafe sold 193 cups of hot chocolate in November. The sales increased in December and they sold 696 cups. How many cups of hot chocolate did they sell in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of cups of hot chocolate sold in November and December.

Given information:
- In November, the cafe sold 193 cups of hot chocolate.
- In December, the cafe sold 696 cups of hot chocolate.

To find the total number of cups sold, we need to add the number of cups sold in November and December.

Total cups of hot chocolate sold = Cups sold in November + Cups sold in December
Total cups of hot chocolate sold = 193 + 696
Total cups of hot chocolate sold = 889

Therefore, the cafe sold a total of 889 cups of hot chocolate during the winter season in November and December.

### Answer: 889

Expected answer: 889

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the sales they had, the local cafe made a mistake and accidentally gave away 50 cups of hot chocolate without charging. How many paid cups of hot chocolate did they actually sell during the winter season?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's revisit this problem with the new information.

Given:
- In November, the cafe sold 193 cups of hot chocolate.
- In December, the cafe sold 696 cups of hot chocolate.
- The cafe accidentally gave away 50 cups of hot chocolate without charging.

To find the total number of paid cups of hot chocolate sold, we need to subtract the number of cups given away from the total cups sold.

Step 1: Calculate the total cups of hot chocolate sold in November and December.
Total cups sold = Cups sold in November + Cups sold in December
Total cups sold = 193 + 696 = 889

Step 2: Subtract the number of cups given away from the total cups sold.
Paid cups of hot chocolate sold = Total cups sold - Cups given away
Paid cups of hot chocolate sold = 889 - 50 = 839

Therefore, the cafe actually sold 839 paid cups of hot chocolate during the winter season after accounting for the 50 cups given away without charging.

### Answer: 839

Expected answer: 839

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a large jungle, there were initially 752 monkeys. Unfortunately, due to various factors, the monkey population reduced by 454. How many monkeys are there in the jungle now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of monkeys that were reduced from the initial population.

Given information:
- The initial population of monkeys in the jungle was 752.
- The monkey population reduced by 454.

Step 1: Subtract the number of monkeys that were reduced from the initial population.
Initial population - Number of monkeys reduced = Remaining population
752 - 454 = 298

Therefore, there are 298 monkeys remaining in the jungle now.

### Answer: 298

Expected answer: 298

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the scenario where the monkey population reduced to 752 - 454 in our large jungle, a nearby forest saw the same reduction in monkey population. Now, if we combine the new populations of both the jungle and the forest, how many monkeys are there in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the remaining population of monkeys in the nearby forest and then add it to the remaining population of monkeys in the jungle.

Given information:
- The initial population of monkeys in the jungle was 752, and it reduced by 454, leaving 298 monkeys.
- The nearby forest saw the same reduction in monkey population as the jungle.

Step 1: Find the remaining population of monkeys in the nearby forest.
Since the reduction in the forest was the same as in the jungle, the remaining population in the forest will also be 298.

Step 2: Find the total population of monkeys by adding the remaining populations of the jungle and the forest.
Total population = Remaining population in the jungle + Remaining population in the forest
Total population = 298 + 298 = 596

Therefore, when we combine the new populations of both the jungle and the forest, there are 596 monkeys in total.

### Answer: 596

Expected answer: 596

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario where the monkey population saw a reduction, we assumed that there were initially 752 monkeys in the jungle. But what if we made a counting error and there were actually only 457 monkeys to start with? Considering the same decrease by 454 monkeys, how many monkeys would be left in the jungle in this case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new initial population of 457 monkeys.

Given information:
- The initial population of monkeys in the jungle was 457.
- The monkey population reduced by 454.

Step 1: Subtract the number of monkeys that were reduced from the initial population.
Initial population - Number of monkeys reduced = Remaining population
457 - 454 = 3

Therefore, if the initial population was 457 monkeys and the reduction was 454 monkeys, there would be 3 monkeys left in the jungle.

### Answer: 3

Expected answer: 3

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: On planet Zeta, there were 442 aliens initially. But after a massive battle, 408 aliens decided to move to another planet. How many aliens are left on planet Zeta now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of aliens on planet Zeta and the number of aliens that moved to another planet after the battle.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 442 aliens on planet Zeta.
- After the battle, 408 aliens decided to move to another planet.

Step 1: Find the number of aliens that remained on planet Zeta.
Number of aliens remaining = Initial number of aliens - Number of aliens that moved
Number of aliens remaining = 442 - 408
Number of aliens remaining = 34

Therefore, there are 34 aliens left on planet Zeta now.

### Answer: 34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After the massive battle on planet Zeta, the remaining aliens decided to multiply. They used their advanced technology to clone themselves exactly once, thus doubling their population. How many aliens are on planet Zeta now considering each alien cloned itself once?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find the total number of aliens on planet Zeta after the remaining aliens cloned themselves once.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 442 aliens on planet Zeta.
- After the battle, 408 aliens moved to another planet, leaving 34 aliens on planet Zeta.
- Each remaining alien cloned itself once, doubling the population.

Step 1: Find the number of aliens remaining after the battle.
Number of aliens remaining = 442 - 408 = 34

Step 2: Calculate the number of aliens after cloning.
Number of aliens after cloning = Number of aliens remaining × 2
Number of aliens after cloning = 34 × 2 = 68

Therefore, after the remaining aliens cloned themselves once, there are now 68 aliens on planet Zeta.

### Answer: 68

Expected answer: 68

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Assume that instead of the initial 442 aliens on planet Zeta, there were 414 aliens. Then, after the massive battle, still, 408 aliens decided to move to another planet. How many aliens would have been left on planet Zeta in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, we have a different initial number of aliens on planet Zeta, but the number of aliens that moved to another planet after the battle remains the same.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 414 aliens on planet Zeta.
- After the battle, 408 aliens decided to move to another planet.

Step 1: Find the number of aliens that remained on planet Zeta.
Number of aliens remaining = Initial number of aliens - Number of aliens that moved
Number of aliens remaining = 414 - 408
Number of aliens remaining = 6

Therefore, in this scenario, there would have been 6 aliens left on planet Zeta.

### Answer: 6

Expected answer: 6

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer had an impressive crop of 845 oranges. However, due to a sudden storm, 583 oranges got damaged and couldn't be sold. How many oranges did the farmer have left that were suitable for sale?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of oranges and the number of damaged oranges.

Given information:
- The farmer had a total of 845 oranges.
- 583 oranges got damaged and couldn't be sold.

Step 1: Find the number of oranges that were not damaged.
Number of oranges not damaged = Total oranges - Damaged oranges
Number of oranges not damaged = 845 - 583
Number of oranges not damaged = 262

Therefore, the farmer had 262 oranges left that were suitable for sale.

### Answer: 262

Expected answer: 262

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After double-checking his farm, the farmer realized that he initially had 689 oranges instead of the originally reported 845 before the storm. Given the same number of oranges damaged in the storm, how many oranges does the farmer actually have left that were suitable for sale now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- The farmer initially had 689 oranges before the storm.
- 583 oranges got damaged and couldn't be sold.

Step 1: Find the number of oranges that were not damaged.
Number of oranges not damaged = Total oranges - Damaged oranges
Number of oranges not damaged = 689 - 583
Number of oranges not damaged = 106

Therefore, with the updated information, the farmer actually has 106 oranges left that were suitable for sale.

### Answer: 106

Expected answer: 106

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were originally 636 cucumbers in the greenhouse. Due to a sudden pest attack, 200 cucumbers were damaged and removed. How many cucumbers remain in the greenhouse?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of cucumbers that were damaged and removed from the original number of cucumbers in the greenhouse.

Given information:
- There were originally 636 cucumbers in the greenhouse.
- 200 cucumbers were damaged and removed due to a pest attack.

Step 1: Subtract the number of cucumbers removed from the original number of cucumbers.
Original number of cucumbers - Number of cucumbers removed = Remaining number of cucumbers
636 - 200 = 436

Therefore, 436 cucumbers remain in the greenhouse after the pest attack.

### Answer: 436

Expected answer: 436

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After removing the damaged cucumbers, the greenhouse owner was gifted 537 cucumbers from a fellow farmer. Now, how many cucumbers does he have in the greenhouse?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of cucumbers gifted to the remaining number of cucumbers in the greenhouse after the pest attack.

Given information:
- After the pest attack, 436 cucumbers remained in the greenhouse.
- The greenhouse owner was gifted 537 cucumbers from a fellow farmer.

Step 1: Add the number of cucumbers gifted to the remaining number of cucumbers in the greenhouse.
Remaining number of cucumbers + Number of cucumbers gifted = Total number of cucumbers
436 + 537 = 973

Therefore, the greenhouse owner now has 973 cucumbers in the greenhouse after receiving the gifted cucumbers.

### Answer: 973

Expected answer: 973

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the initial scenario, imagine that instead of 200 cucumbers being damaged by pests, 264 cucumbers had been damaged. How many cucumbers would then remain in the greenhouse?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- There were originally 636 cucumbers in the greenhouse.
- 264 cucumbers were damaged and removed due to a pest attack.

Step 1: Subtract the number of cucumbers removed from the original number of cucumbers.
Original number of cucumbers - Number of cucumbers removed = Remaining number of cucumbers
636 - 264 = 372

Therefore, if 264 cucumbers were damaged by the pest attack, 372 cucumbers would remain in the greenhouse.

### Answer: 372

Expected answer: 372

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A daring pirate, Captain Scallywag, has a treasure chest filled with 206 shiny sapphires and 312 glistening emeralds. How many precious stones are there in total in his treasure chest?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of precious stones in Captain Scallywag's treasure chest by adding the number of sapphires and emeralds.

Given information:
- Captain Scallywag has 206 sapphires.
- Captain Scallywag has 312 emeralds.

Step 1: Add the number of sapphires and emeralds.
Number of sapphires + Number of emeralds = Total number of precious stones
206 + 312 = 518

Therefore, there are a total of 518 precious stones in Captain Scallywag's treasure chest.

### Answer: 518

Expected answer: 518

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: A daring pirate, Captain Scallywag, has a treasure chest filled with 206 shiny sapphires and 312 glistening emeralds. But amidst a dangerous sea-storm, he loses a tragic amount of 506 precious stones to the sea. How many precious stones does Captain Scallywag have left in his treasure chest now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find out how many precious stones Captain Scallywag has left in his treasure chest after losing 506 stones during the sea-storm.

Given:
- Captain Scallywag initially had 206 sapphires and 312 emeralds in his treasure chest.
- He lost 506 precious stones during the sea-storm.

Step 1: Calculate the total number of precious stones Captain Scallywag had initially.
Total precious stones = Number of sapphires + Number of emeralds
Total precious stones = 206 + 312 = 518

Step 2: Calculate the number of precious stones left after losing 506 stones.
Number of precious stones left = Total precious stones - Number of stones lost
Number of precious stones left = 518 - 506 = 12

Therefore, Captain Scallywag has 12 precious stones left in his treasure chest after the sea-storm.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario, the daring pirate, Captain Scallywag, had a treasure chest filled not with 206 shiny sapphires, but with 426 shiny sapphires as well as his 312 glistening emeralds. Given this, how many precious stones is he starting with in his treasure chest?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the total number of precious stones in Captain Scallywag's treasure chest with the updated information.

Given information:
- Captain Scallywag has 426 sapphires.
- Captain Scallywag has 312 emeralds.

Step 1: Add the number of sapphires and emeralds.
Number of sapphires + Number of emeralds = Total number of precious stones
426 + 312 = 738

Therefore, with the updated information, there are a total of 738 precious stones in Captain Scallywag's treasure chest.

### Answer: 738

Expected answer: 738

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a clothing store, there are initially 307 jackets. A new shipment brings in an additional 262 jackets. How many jackets are there in the store now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of jackets after the new shipment arrives.

Given information:
- Initially, there are 307 jackets in the store.
- A new shipment brings in an additional 262 jackets.

To find the total number of jackets after the new shipment, we need to add the initial number of jackets and the number of jackets in the new shipment.

Total number of jackets = Initial number of jackets + Number of jackets in the new shipment
Total number of jackets = 307 + 262
Total number of jackets = 569

Therefore, after the new shipment arrives, there are 569 jackets in the store.

### Answer: 569

Expected answer: 569

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: The clothing store has a total space to accommodate 714 jackets. If currently there are 307 jackets and an additional 262 jackets are added from a new shipment, then how many more jackets can the store accommodate?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of jackets after the new shipment arrives and then subtract it from the total space available for jackets in the store.

Given information:
- The store has a total space to accommodate 714 jackets.
- Initially, there are 307 jackets in the store.
- A new shipment brings in an additional 262 jackets.

Step 1: Find the total number of jackets after the new shipment arrives.
Total number of jackets = Initial number of jackets + Number of jackets in the new shipment
Total number of jackets = 307 + 262 = 569

Step 2: Find the remaining space available for jackets in the store.
Remaining space for jackets = Total space available - Total number of jackets
Remaining space for jackets = 714 - 569 = 145

Therefore, the store can accommodate 145 more jackets after the new shipment arrives.

### Answer: 145

Expected answer: 145

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, if the clothing store initially had 432 jackets instead of 307, and a new shipment still brought in the same 262 jackets, how many jackets are there in the store now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, we have a different initial number of jackets, but the same number of jackets in the new shipment.

Given information:
- Initially, there are 432 jackets in the store.
- A new shipment brings in an additional 262 jackets.

To find the total number of jackets after the new shipment, we need to add the initial number of jackets and the number of jackets in the new shipment.

Total number of jackets = Initial number of jackets + Number of jackets in the new shipment
Total number of jackets = 432 + 262
Total number of jackets = 694

Therefore, after the new shipment arrives, there are 694 jackets in the store.

### Answer: 694

Expected answer: 694

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A spaceship travels a distance of 843 light years. It then continues its journey for another 23 light years. How far has the spaceship traveled in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the two distances traveled by the spaceship.

Given information:
- The spaceship travels a distance of 843 light years.
- The spaceship then continues its journey for another 23 light years.

Step 1: Add the two distances traveled by the spaceship.
Total distance traveled = Initial distance + Additional distance
Total distance traveled = 843 light years + 23 light years
Total distance traveled = 843 + 23
Total distance traveled = 866 light years

Therefore, the spaceship has traveled a total distance of 866 light years.

### Answer: 866

Expected answer: 866

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following its journey of 843 light years plus an additional 23 light years, the spaceship then travels backwards by 308 light years to investigate an interesting cosmic event. How far is the spaceship now from its original starting point?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the net distance traveled by the spaceship from its original starting point.

Given information:
- The spaceship initially traveled a distance of 843 light years.
- The spaceship then continued its journey for another 23 light years.
- After that, the spaceship traveled backwards by 308 light years.

Step 1: Find the total distance traveled by the spaceship before going backwards.
Total distance traveled before going backwards = 843 light years + 23 light years
Total distance traveled before going backwards = 866 light years

Step 2: Find the net distance traveled by the spaceship after going backwards.
Net distance traveled = Total distance traveled before going backwards - Distance traveled backwards
Net distance traveled = 866 light years - 308 light years
Net distance traveled = 558 light years

Therefore, the spaceship is now 558 light years away from its original starting point.

### Answer: 558

Expected answer: 558

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that instead of initially traveling 843 light years, the spaceship had initially traveled 332 light years, but still continued its journey for an additional 23 light years. How far would the spaceship have traveled in total in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- The spaceship initially travels a distance of 332 light years.
- The spaceship then continues its journey for another 23 light years.

Step 1: Add the initial distance and the additional distance traveled by the spaceship.
Total distance traveled = Initial distance + Additional distance
Total distance traveled = 332 light years + 23 light years
Total distance traveled = 332 + 23
Total distance traveled = 355 light years

Therefore, in this scenario, the spaceship would have traveled a total distance of 355 light years.

### Answer: 355

Expected answer: 355

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A locksmith had 573 keys in her workshop. She crafted an additional 160 keys to add to her collection. How many keys does the locksmith have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of keys the locksmith has after adding the newly crafted keys to her existing collection.

Given information:
- The locksmith initially had 573 keys in her workshop.
- She crafted an additional 160 keys.

Step 1: Find the total number of keys by adding the initial number of keys and the newly crafted keys.
Total number of keys = Initial number of keys + Newly crafted keys
Total number of keys = 573 + 160
Total number of keys = 733

Therefore, the locksmith now has 733 keys in her workshop.

### Answer: 733

Expected answer: 733

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After counting her keys, the locksmith found that she had forgotten about an additional set of 85 keys that she had stored in a drawer. How many keys does she have in total now including these keys?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Initially, the locksmith had:
* 573 keys in her workshop

Then, she crafted an additional:
* 160 keys

So, the total number of keys she had after crafting the new keys was:
* 573 + 160 = 733 keys

Now, she found an additional set of:
* 85 keys in a drawer

To find the total number of keys she has now, we need to add this additional set to the previous total:
* 733 + 85 = 818 keys

Therefore, the total number of keys the locksmith has now, including the keys found in the drawer, is 818 keys.

### Answer: 818

Expected answer: 818

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose initially the locksmith had 692 keys in her workshop instead of 573, and she still crafted an additional 160 keys. How many keys would she have had then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- The locksmith initially had 692 keys in her workshop.
- She crafted an additional 160 keys.

Step 1: Find the total number of keys by adding the initial number of keys and the newly crafted keys.
Total number of keys = Initial number of keys + Newly crafted keys
Total number of keys = 692 + 160
Total number of keys = 852

Therefore, if the locksmith initially had 692 keys in her workshop and she crafted an additional 160 keys, she would have had 852 keys in total.

### Answer: 852

Expected answer: 852

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a large sanctuary, there were initially 983 butterflies. Unfortunately, due to some hazards, 53 butterflies left the sanctuary. How many butterflies are left in the sanctuary?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of butterflies that left the sanctuary from the initial number of butterflies.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 983 butterflies in the sanctuary.
- 53 butterflies left the sanctuary.

Step 1: Subtract the number of butterflies that left from the initial number of butterflies.
Initial number of butterflies - Number of butterflies that left = Number of butterflies remaining
983 - 53 = 930

Therefore, there are 930 butterflies left in the sanctuary.

### Answer: 930

Expected answer: 930

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a large sanctuary, there were initially 983 butterflies. Unfortunately, due to some hazards, 53 butterflies left the sanctuary. Later, 708 more butterflies left due to a sudden change in weather conditions. How many butterflies are left in the sanctuary now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the total number of butterflies that left the sanctuary from the initial number of butterflies.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 983 butterflies in the sanctuary.
- 53 butterflies left the sanctuary due to some hazards.
- 708 more butterflies left the sanctuary due to a sudden change in weather conditions.

Step 1: Calculate the total number of butterflies that left the sanctuary.
Number of butterflies that left due to hazards + Number of butterflies that left due to weather conditions = Total number of butterflies that left
53 + 708 = 761

Step 2: Subtract the total number of butterflies that left from the initial number of butterflies.
Initial number of butterflies - Total number of butterflies that left = Number of butterflies remaining
983 - 761 = 222

Therefore, there are 222 butterflies left in the sanctuary now.

### Answer: 222

Expected answer: 222

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previously described sanctuary, suppose there were initially 596 butterflies instead of 983. Due to the same hazards, 53 butterflies still left the sanctuary. How many butterflies would be left in the sanctuary now under this new scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- Initially, there were 596 butterflies in the sanctuary.
- 53 butterflies left the sanctuary due to the hazards.

To find the number of butterflies remaining, we need to subtract the number of butterflies that left from the initial number of butterflies.

Step 1: Subtract the number of butterflies that left from the initial number of butterflies.
Initial number of butterflies - Number of butterflies that left = Number of butterflies remaining
596 - 53 = 543

Therefore, with the new scenario where there were initially 596 butterflies and 53 butterflies left due to the hazards, there would be 543 butterflies left in the sanctuary.

### Answer: 543

Expected answer: 543

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer has 542 acres of land. He sold 398 acres of his land. How much land does he have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of acres the farmer sold from the total number of acres he had initially.

Given information:
- The farmer had 542 acres of land.
- The farmer sold 398 acres of land.

Step 1: Subtract the number of acres sold from the total number of acres.
Total acres - Acres sold = Remaining acres
542 acres - 398 acres = 144 acres

Therefore, the farmer has 144 acres of land left after selling 398 acres.

### Answer: 144

Expected answer: 144

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In retrospect, the farmer actually sold 188 acres of land instead of 398 acres. How much land does he have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- The farmer had 542 acres of land initially.
- The farmer sold 188 acres of land.

Step 1: Subtract the number of acres sold from the total number of acres.
Total acres - Acres sold = Remaining acres
542 acres - 188 acres = 354 acres

Therefore, with the updated information that the farmer sold 188 acres of land instead of 398 acres, he has 354 acres of land left.

### Answer: 354

Expected answer: 354

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: In a fruit market, there are 140 green grapes in one stall and 377 red grapes in another stall. How many grapes are there in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the number of green grapes and the number of red grapes.

Given information:
- There are 140 green grapes in one stall.
- There are 377 red grapes in another stall.

Step 1: Find the total number of grapes by adding the number of green grapes and the number of red grapes.
Total number of grapes = Number of green grapes + Number of red grapes
Total number of grapes = 140 + 377
Total number of grapes = 517

Therefore, there are 517 grapes in total in the fruit market.

### Answer: 517

Expected answer: 517

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In a fruit market, there are 140 green grapes in one stall and 377 red grapes in another stall. But then, 318 grapes were bought by a customer. How many grapes are there left in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of grapes initially and then subtract the number of grapes bought by the customer.

Given information:
- There are 140 green grapes in one stall.
- There are 377 red grapes in another stall.
- 318 grapes were bought by a customer.

Step 1: Find the total number of grapes initially.
Total number of grapes initially = Number of green grapes + Number of red grapes
Total number of grapes initially = 140 + 377
Total number of grapes initially = 517

Step 2: Subtract the number of grapes bought by the customer from the total number of grapes initially.
Number of grapes left = Total number of grapes initially - Number of grapes bought
Number of grapes left = 517 - 318
Number of grapes left = 199

Therefore, there are 199 grapes left in total in the fruit market after the customer bought 318 grapes.

### Answer: 199

Expected answer: 199

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's reconsider the scenario in the fruit market. What if initially there were 354 green grapes instead of 140 in one stall while the number of red grapes remained the same at 377 in another stall? How many grapes would there be in total then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's reconsider the scenario with the updated information.

Given information:
- There are 354 green grapes in one stall.
- There are 377 red grapes in another stall.

To find the total number of grapes, we need to add the number of green grapes and the number of red grapes.

Step 1: Find the total number of grapes by adding the number of green grapes and the number of red grapes.
Total number of grapes = Number of green grapes + Number of red grapes
Total number of grapes = 354 + 377
Total number of grapes = 731

Therefore, with 354 green grapes in one stall and 377 red grapes in another stall, there would be a total of 731 grapes in the fruit market.

### Answer: 731

Expected answer: 731

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A manufacturer has 338 pairs of binoculars in his warehouse. Then, an additional amount of 591 pairs are produced. How many pairs of binoculars does the manufacturer have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of pairs of binoculars the manufacturer has after the additional pairs are produced.

Given information:
- The manufacturer initially has 338 pairs of binoculars in the warehouse.
- An additional 591 pairs of binoculars are produced.

To find the total number of pairs of binoculars, we need to add the initial number of pairs to the additional pairs produced.

Total number of pairs of binoculars = Initial number of pairs + Additional pairs produced
Total number of pairs of binoculars = 338 + 591
Total number of pairs of binoculars = 929

Therefore, the manufacturer has a total of 929 pairs of binoculars after the additional pairs are produced.

### Answer: 929

Expected answer: 929

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, the manufacturer had made an additional 591 pairs of binoculars combined with the previous stock of 338 pairs. However, he then sold 245 pairs of the newly made binoculars. How many pairs of binoculars does he have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of pairs of binoculars the manufacturer had after the additional pairs were produced, and then subtract the number of pairs sold.

Given information:
- The manufacturer initially had 338 pairs of binoculars in the warehouse.
- An additional 591 pairs of binoculars were produced.
- The manufacturer sold 245 pairs of the newly made binoculars.

Step 1: Find the total number of pairs of binoculars after the additional pairs were produced.
Total number of pairs of binoculars = Initial number of pairs + Additional pairs produced
Total number of pairs of binoculars = 338 + 591 = 929

Step 2: Subtract the number of pairs sold from the total number of pairs.
Number of pairs left = Total number of pairs - Number of pairs sold
Number of pairs left = 929 - 245 = 684

Therefore, the manufacturer has 684 pairs of binoculars left after selling 245 pairs of the newly made binoculars.

### Answer: 684

Expected answer: 684

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, the manufacturer started with 338 pairs of binoculars, made more, and then sold some. Now, let's imagine instead that the manufacturer originally had 274 pairs of binoculars before making an additional 591 pairs. How many pairs of binoculars would he have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, we need to find the total number of pairs of binoculars the manufacturer has after starting with 274 pairs and producing an additional 591 pairs.

Given information:
- The manufacturer initially has 274 pairs of binoculars.
- An additional 591 pairs of binoculars are produced.

To find the total number of pairs of binoculars, we need to add the initial number of pairs to the additional pairs produced.

Total number of pairs of binoculars = Initial number of pairs + Additional pairs produced
Total number of pairs of binoculars = 274 + 591
Total number of pairs of binoculars = 865

Therefore, after starting with 274 pairs of binoculars and producing an additional 591 pairs, the manufacturer would have a total of 865 pairs of binoculars.

### Answer: 865

Expected answer: 865

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: John has 537 dollars in his bank account. He found 37 dollars on the street. How much money does John have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amount of money John had in his bank account and the amount of money he found on the street.

Given information:
- John has $537 in his bank account.
- John found $37 on the street.

Step 1: Add the amount of money John had in his bank account and the amount of money he found on the street.
Amount of money John had in his bank account + Amount of money John found on the street = Total amount of money John has now
$537 + $37 = $574

Therefore, John has $574 now.

### Answer: 574

Expected answer: 574

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: John, who initially had 537 dollars in his bank account, found 37 dollars on the street. Then, he spent 518 dollars on a new bicycle. How much money does John have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total amount of money John had after finding the $37 on the street, and then subtract the cost of the new bicycle from that amount.

Given information:
- John initially had $537 in his bank account.
- John found $37 on the street.
- John spent $518 on a new bicycle.

Step 1: Find the total amount of money John had after finding the $37 on the street.
Amount of money John had in his bank account + Amount of money John found on the street = Total amount of money John had
$537 + $37 = $574

Step 2: Subtract the cost of the new bicycle from the total amount of money John had.
Total amount of money John had - Cost of the new bicycle = Amount of money John has left
$574 - $518 = $56

Therefore, John has $56 left now.

### Answer: 56

Expected answer: 56

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's consider a slightly different situation. Suppose John initially had 663 dollars in his bank account instead of 537 dollars, and he still found 37 dollars on the street. How much money does John have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's consider the new situation.

Given information:
- John initially had $663 in his bank account.
- John found $37 on the street.

To find the total amount of money John has now, we need to add the amount of money he initially had in his bank account and the amount of money he found on the street.

Step 1: Add the amount of money John initially had in his bank account and the amount of money he found on the street.
Amount of money John initially had in his bank account + Amount of money John found on the street = Total amount of money John has now
$663 + $37 = $700

Therefore, with the new information, John has $700 now.

### Answer: 700

Expected answer: 700

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Princess Annabelle has 121 beautiful dresses in her wardrobe. Her stylist added 855 more gowns to her collection. How many dresses does Princess Annabelle have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of dresses Princess Annabelle has after her stylist added 855 more gowns to her collection.

Given information:
- Princess Annabelle initially had 121 dresses in her wardrobe.
- Her stylist added 855 more gowns to her collection.

Step 1: Find the total number of dresses by adding the initial number of dresses and the number of dresses added.
Total number of dresses = Initial number of dresses + Number of dresses added
Total number of dresses = 121 + 855
Total number of dresses = 976

Therefore, Princess Annabelle now has 976 dresses in her collection.

### Answer: 976

Expected answer: 976

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After taking a close look at her vast collection, Princess Annabelle decides to donate 314 dresses to a charity for underprivileged girls. How many dresses does Princess Annabelle have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of dresses Princess Annabelle has left after donating 314 dresses to charity.

Given information:
- Princess Annabelle initially had 976 dresses in her collection.
- She donated 314 dresses to charity.

Step 1: Find the number of dresses left by subtracting the number of dresses donated from the initial number of dresses.
Number of dresses left = Initial number of dresses - Number of dresses donated
Number of dresses left = 976 - 314
Number of dresses left = 662

Therefore, after donating 314 dresses to charity, Princess Annabelle has 662 dresses left in her collection.

### Answer: 662

Expected answer: 662

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Princess Annabelle had originally started with 121 dresses and her stylist had added only 501 dresses instead of 855 to her collection. How many dresses would Princess Annabelle have had in that case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this case, we need to find the total number of dresses Princess Annabelle would have if her stylist added 501 dresses instead of 855 to her initial collection of 121 dresses.

Given information:
- Princess Annabelle initially had 121 dresses in her wardrobe.
- Her stylist added 501 dresses to her collection.

Step 1: Find the total number of dresses by adding the initial number of dresses and the number of dresses added.
Total number of dresses = Initial number of dresses + Number of dresses added
Total number of dresses = 121 + 501
Total number of dresses = 622

Therefore, if the stylist had added 501 dresses instead of 855, Princess Annabelle would have had 622 dresses in her collection.

### Answer: 622

Expected answer: 622

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A marine biologist studying sharks at the local aquarium counts 131 nurse sharks and 157 bull sharks. How many sharks are there in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of nurse sharks and the number of bull sharks.

Given information:
- There are 131 nurse sharks.
- There are 157 bull sharks.

Step 1: Add the number of nurse sharks and bull sharks.
Number of nurse sharks + Number of bull sharks = Total number of sharks
131 + 157 = 288

Therefore, there are 288 sharks in total at the local aquarium.

### Answer: 288

Expected answer: 288

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the nurse sharks and bull sharks at the local aquarium, there are also 22 great white sharks. How many sharks are there in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's add the number of great white sharks to the previous total.

Given information:
- There are 131 nurse sharks.
- There are 157 bull sharks.
- There are 22 great white sharks.

Previous total number of sharks = 131 (nurse sharks) + 157 (bull sharks) = 288

Step 1: Add the number of great white sharks to the previous total.
Previous total number of sharks + Number of great white sharks = New total number of sharks
288 + 22 = 310

Therefore, with the addition of 22 great white sharks, there are now 310 sharks in total at the local aquarium.

### Answer: 310

Expected answer: 310

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous situation, a marine biologist counted nurse sharks and bull sharks at the local aquarium. What if instead of 157 bull sharks, there were actually 408 bull sharks? How many sharks would there be in total then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- There are 131 nurse sharks.
- There are 408 bull sharks.

To find the total number of sharks, we need to add the number of nurse sharks and the number of bull sharks.

Step 1: Add the number of nurse sharks and bull sharks.
Number of nurse sharks + Number of bull sharks = Total number of sharks
131 + 408 = 539

Therefore, if there were 408 bull sharks instead of 157, there would be a total of 539 sharks at the local aquarium.

### Answer: 539

Expected answer: 539

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A novel has 554 pages. If the reader has already read 228 pages, how many pages are left for him/her to read?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of pages in the novel and the number of pages already read.

Given information:
- The novel has 554 pages.
- The reader has already read 228 pages.

Step 1: Find the number of pages left to read.
Number of pages left to read = Total number of pages - Number of pages already read
Number of pages left to read = 554 - 228
Number of pages left to read = 326

Therefore, the reader has 326 pages left to read in the novel.

### Answer: 326

Expected answer: 326

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After finishing the novel, the reader decides to pick up another book, which contains 195 pages. How many pages does the reader have to read if he/she wants to finish both books?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of pages in both books.

Given information:
- The first book (the novel) has 554 pages, and the reader has already read 228 pages.
- The second book has 195 pages.

Step 1: Find the number of pages left to read in the first book (the novel).
Number of pages left to read in the first book = Total number of pages - Number of pages already read
Number of pages left to read in the first book = 554 - 228 = 326 pages

Step 2: Find the total number of pages the reader needs to read to finish both books.
Total number of pages to read = Number of pages left to read in the first book + Number of pages in the second book
Total number of pages to read = 326 + 195 = 521 pages

Therefore, the reader has to read 521 pages to finish both books.

### Answer: 521

Expected answer: 521

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Let's consider a slight change in the original problem. If the first book the reader picked up had 857 pages instead of 554, and the reader has already read 228 pages, how many pages are left in that book for the reader to read?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's consider the revised problem with the new information.

Given information:
- The book has 857 pages.
- The reader has already read 228 pages.

To find the number of pages left to read, we need to subtract the number of pages already read from the total number of pages in the book.

Step 1: Find the number of pages left to read.
Number of pages left to read = Total number of pages - Number of pages already read
Number of pages left to read = 857 - 228
Number of pages left to read = 629

Therefore, with the new information, the reader has 629 pages left to read in the book.

### Answer: 629

Expected answer: 629

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A painter is working on a large mural that requires different colors of paint. He has used 48 liters of red paint and 330 liters of blue paint. How many liters of paint has he used in total for his mural?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amount of red paint and blue paint used by the painter.

Given information:
- The painter used 48 liters of red paint.
- The painter used 330 liters of blue paint.

Total amount of paint used = Amount of red paint + Amount of blue paint
Total amount of paint used = 48 liters + 330 liters
Total amount of paint used = 378 liters

Therefore, the painter has used a total of 378 liters of paint for his mural.

### Answer: 378

Expected answer: 378

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the red and blue paint, the painter had also used 498 liters of yellow paint. In total, how many liters of paint has the painter used for the mural?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the total amount of paint used by the painter, including the yellow paint.

Given information:
- The painter used 48 liters of red paint.
- The painter used 330 liters of blue paint.
- The painter used 498 liters of yellow paint.

Total amount of paint used = Amount of red paint + Amount of blue paint + Amount of yellow paint
Total amount of paint used = 48 liters + 330 liters + 498 liters
Total amount of paint used = 876 liters

Therefore, the painter has used a total of 876 liters of paint for the mural.

### Answer: 876

Expected answer: 876

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Your bedroom was originally decorated with 584 pillows. However, due to a cleaning process, 403 of them have been removed. How many pillows are left in your bedroom now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of pillows removed from the original number of pillows.

Given information:
- The bedroom was originally decorated with 584 pillows.
- 403 pillows were removed during the cleaning process.

Step 1: Subtract the number of pillows removed from the original number of pillows.
Number of pillows left = Original number of pillows - Number of pillows removed
Number of pillows left = 584 - 403
Number of pillows left = 181

Therefore, there are 181 pillows left in the bedroom after the cleaning process.

### Answer: 181

Expected answer: 181

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, after rearranging your bedroom decor, you decide to add 348 more pillows to the room. Now, how many pillows are there in your bedroom?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's continue with the previous scenario.

Given information:
- After the cleaning process, there were 181 pillows left in the bedroom.
- You decided to add 348 more pillows to the room.

To find the total number of pillows in the bedroom now, we need to add the number of pillows added to the number of pillows left after the cleaning process.

Step 1: Add the number of pillows added to the number of pillows left after the cleaning process.
Total number of pillows = Number of pillows left after cleaning + Number of pillows added
Total number of pillows = 181 + 348
Total number of pillows = 529

Therefore, after adding 348 more pillows, there are now 529 pillows in your bedroom.

### Answer: 529

Expected answer: 529

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There are 182 children playing on the jungle gym every morning. In the afternoon, an additional 223 children come to play. How many children in total play on the jungle gym each day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of children playing on the jungle gym by adding the number of children in the morning and the additional number of children in the afternoon.

Given information:
- In the morning, there are 182 children playing on the jungle gym.
- In the afternoon, an additional 223 children come to play.

Step 1: Find the total number of children playing on the jungle gym each day.
Total number of children = Number of children in the morning + Additional number of children in the afternoon
Total number of children = 182 + 223
Total number of children = 405

Therefore, the total number of children playing on the jungle gym each day is 405.

### Answer: 405

Expected answer: 405

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Considering the 182 children who play on the jungle gym every morning and the additional 223 children who come in the afternoon, we can see it's popular. What's more, an adjacent playground attracts 490 more children daily. So, how many children in total enjoy these facilities each day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of children who enjoy the facilities each day by adding the number of children playing on the jungle gym and the number of children at the adjacent playground.

Given information:
- In the morning, there are 182 children playing on the jungle gym.
- In the afternoon, an additional 223 children come to play on the jungle gym.
- An adjacent playground attracts 490 more children daily.

Step 1: Find the total number of children playing on the jungle gym each day.
Total number of children on the jungle gym = Number of children in the morning + Additional number of children in the afternoon
Total number of children on the jungle gym = 182 + 223 = 405

Step 2: Find the total number of children enjoying the facilities each day.
Total number of children enjoying the facilities = Total number of children on the jungle gym + Number of children at the adjacent playground
Total number of children enjoying the facilities = 405 + 490 = 895

Therefore, the total number of children enjoying these facilities each day is 895.

### Answer: 895

Expected answer: 895

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A magical mermaid has 306 shiny pearls in her collection. However, she generously decides to gift 289 pearls to her mermaid friend. How many shiny pearls are left in her collection?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of pearls the mermaid had initially and the number of pearls she gifted to her friend.

Given information:
- The mermaid had 306 shiny pearls in her collection initially.
- The mermaid gifted 289 pearls to her mermaid friend.

Step 1: Subtract the number of pearls gifted from the initial number of pearls.
Number of pearls left = Initial number of pearls - Number of pearls gifted
Number of pearls left = 306 - 289
Number of pearls left = 17

Therefore, the mermaid has 17 shiny pearls left in her collection after gifting 289 pearls to her friend.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous problem: Suppose that the magical mermaid originally had 306 shiny pearls, but instead of gifting 289 pearls to her friend, she only gave away 211. How many shiny pearls does the mermaid have left now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find the number of shiny pearls left with the mermaid after she gifted 211 pearls to her friend.

Given information:
- The mermaid originally had 306 shiny pearls.
- The mermaid gifted 211 pearls to her friend.

Step 1: Subtract the number of pearls gifted from the initial number of pearls.
Number of pearls left = Initial number of pearls - Number of pearls gifted
Number of pearls left = 306 - 211
Number of pearls left = 95

Therefore, after gifting 211 shiny pearls to her friend, the mermaid has 95 shiny pearls left in her collection.

### Answer: 95

Expected answer: 95

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A camping goods store has 324 basic models of tents and 465 advanced models. How many tents are there total in the store?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of tents in the store by adding the number of basic models and the number of advanced models.

Given information:
- The store has 324 basic models of tents.
- The store has 465 advanced models of tents.

Step 1: Add the number of basic models and the number of advanced models.
Total number of tents = Number of basic models + Number of advanced models
Total number of tents = 324 + 465
Total number of tents = 789

Therefore, there are 789 tents in total in the store.

### Answer: 789

Expected answer: 789

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After a successful summer sale, the camping goods store sold 546 tents from their stock. How many tents are there left in the store now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of tents left in the store after the summer sale.

Given information:
- The store initially had a total of 789 tents (324 basic models and 465 advanced models).
- The store sold 546 tents during the summer sale.

Step 1: Find the number of tents left in the store after the summer sale.
Number of tents left = Initial number of tents - Number of tents sold
Number of tents left = 789 - 546
Number of tents left = 243

Therefore, there are 243 tents left in the store after the successful summer sale.

### Answer: 243

Expected answer: 243

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the camping goods store initially had 324 basic models of tents and 303 advanced models, instead of 465. In that case, how many tents would there be total in the store?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- The store has 324 basic models of tents.
- The store has 303 advanced models of tents.

To find the total number of tents in the store, we need to add the number of basic models and the number of advanced models.

Step 1: Add the number of basic models and the number of advanced models.
Total number of tents = Number of basic models + Number of advanced models
Total number of tents = 324 + 303
Total number of tents = 627

Therefore, with 324 basic models of tents and 303 advanced models, there would be a total of 627 tents in the store.

### Answer: 627

Expected answer: 627

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There are 604 mice in a research lab. After some tests and experiments, 327 mice are released back into the wild. How many mice are left in the lab?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the initial number of mice and the number of mice released.

Given information:
- There are 604 mice in the research lab initially.
- 327 mice are released back into the wild.

Step 1: Find the number of mice left in the lab.
Number of mice left in the lab = Initial number of mice - Number of mice released
Number of mice left in the lab = 604 - 327
Number of mice left in the lab = 277

Therefore, there are 277 mice left in the research lab after releasing 327 mice.

### Answer: 277

Expected answer: 277

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the initial situation, suppose that there were originally only 408 mice in the research lab instead of 604. After some tests and experiments, 327 mice are still released back into the wild. How many mice are left in the lab in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- There are 408 mice in the research lab initially.
- 327 mice are released back into the wild.

Step 1: Find the number of mice left in the lab.
Number of mice left in the lab = Initial number of mice - Number of mice released
Number of mice left in the lab = 408 - 327
Number of mice left in the lab = 81

Therefore, with the initial number of mice being 408, and after releasing 327 mice back into the wild, there are 81 mice left in the research lab.

### Answer: 81

Expected answer: 81

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Imagine that there are currently 171 astronauts in space. A new mission is scheduled and will send an additional 542 astronauts to join them. How many astronauts will be in space after this mission?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of astronauts currently in space to the number of astronauts that will be sent on the new mission.

Given information:
- There are currently 171 astronauts in space.
- A new mission will send an additional 542 astronauts to join them.

Number of astronauts after the new mission = Current number of astronauts + Number of astronauts sent on the new mission
Number of astronauts after the new mission = 171 + 542
Number of astronauts after the new mission = 713

Therefore, after the new mission, there will be 713 astronauts in space.

### Answer: 713

Expected answer: 713

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the last mission, 143 of the astronauts have returned to Earth for a well-deserved break. How many astronauts are still in space after this?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to subtract the number of astronauts who returned to Earth from the total number of astronauts in space after the new mission.

Given information:
- After the new mission, there were 713 astronauts in space.
- 143 astronauts have returned to Earth for a break.

Number of astronauts still in space = Total number of astronauts in space - Number of astronauts who returned to Earth
Number of astronauts still in space = 713 - 143
Number of astronauts still in space = 570

Therefore, after 143 astronauts returned to Earth, there are 570 astronauts still in space.

### Answer: 570

Expected answer: 570

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that initially, there were only 171 astronauts in space, but a recent mission sent an additional 10 astronauts to join them. How many astronauts would be in space then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the initial number of astronauts in space to the number of astronauts sent on the recent mission.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 171 astronauts in space.
- A recent mission sent an additional 10 astronauts to join them.

Number of astronauts after the recent mission = Initial number of astronauts + Number of astronauts sent on the recent mission
Number of astronauts after the recent mission = 171 + 10
Number of astronauts after the recent mission = 181

Therefore, after the recent mission, there would be 181 astronauts in space.

### Answer: 181

Expected answer: 181

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A farmer planted 746 carrot plants in the first field and an additional 91 carrot plants in the second field. How many carrot plants did the farmer plant in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of carrot plants planted in the first field and the second field.

Given information:
- The farmer planted 746 carrot plants in the first field.
- The farmer planted 91 carrot plants in the second field.

Step 1: Add the number of carrot plants planted in the first field and the second field.
Number of carrot plants planted in the first field + Number of carrot plants planted in the second field = Total number of carrot plants planted
746 + 91 = 837

Therefore, the farmer planted a total of 837 carrot plants.

### Answer: 837

Expected answer: 837

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous question where a farmer planted 746 carrot plants in the first field and an additional 91 carrot plants in the second field. There was a hailstorm, after which 83 plants did not survive. Avoiding the ones that did not survive, how many carrot plants does the farmer have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find out how many carrot plants the farmer has left after the hailstorm.

Given:
- The farmer initially planted 746 carrot plants in the first field and 91 carrot plants in the second field.
- The total number of carrot plants planted was 746 + 91 = 837.
- After the hailstorm, 83 plants did not survive.

To find the number of carrot plants the farmer has now, we need to subtract the number of plants that did not survive from the total number of plants planted.

Step 1: Calculate the total number of carrot plants planted.
Total number of carrot plants planted = 746 + 91 = 837

Step 2: Subtract the number of plants that did not survive from the total number of plants planted.
Number of carrot plants the farmer has now = Total number of carrot plants planted - Number of plants that did not survive
Number of carrot plants the farmer has now = 837 - 83 = 754

Therefore, the farmer has 754 carrot plants now, after avoiding the ones that did not survive the hailstorm.

### Answer: 754

Expected answer: 754

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous question about the farmer losing some carrot plants to a hailstorm. Let's consider a scenario where the farmer had initially planted 737 carrot plants in the first field, instead of 746. If the same 91 carrot plants were planted in the second field, how many carrot plants would the farmer have in total then, before the hailstorm hit?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem.

Given information:
- The farmer planted 737 carrot plants in the first field.
- The farmer planted 91 carrot plants in the second field.

To find the total number of carrot plants before the hailstorm hit, we need to add the number of carrot plants planted in the first field and the second field.

Step 1: Add the number of carrot plants planted in the first field and the second field.
Number of carrot plants planted in the first field + Number of carrot plants planted in the second field = Total number of carrot plants planted before the hailstorm
737 + 91 = 828

Therefore, before the hailstorm hit, the farmer had a total of 828 carrot plants.

### Answer: 828

Expected answer: 828

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: At a ballet school, there are 59 ballerinas practicing in the morning session and 70 ballerinas practicing in the afternoon session. How many ballerinas are practicing throughout the day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day.

Given information:
- There are 59 ballerinas practicing in the morning session.
- There are 70 ballerinas practicing in the afternoon session.

However, we don't know if there are any ballerinas practicing in both sessions. If there are ballerinas practicing in both sessions, we need to subtract them from the total to avoid double-counting.

Since the question doesn't provide any information about ballerinas practicing in both sessions, we can assume that the morning and afternoon sessions have different sets of ballerinas.

Therefore, to find the total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day, we can simply add the number of ballerinas in the morning session and the number of ballerinas in the afternoon session.

Total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day = Number of ballerinas in the morning session + Number of ballerinas in the afternoon session
Total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day = 59 + 70
Total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day = 129

### Answer: 129

Expected answer: 129

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the ballet practice sessions, 791 more ballerinas arrive for a special workshop. Now, how many total ballerinas are present for the day's events at the ballet school?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of ballerinas present for the day's events at the ballet school, including the ballerinas who were practicing in the morning and afternoon sessions, and the additional ballerinas who arrived for the special workshop.

Given information:
- There were 59 ballerinas practicing in the morning session.
- There were 70 ballerinas practicing in the afternoon session.
- The total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day was 129 (59 + 70).
- 791 more ballerinas arrived for a special workshop.

To find the total number of ballerinas present for the day's events, we need to add the number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day and the number of additional ballerinas who arrived for the special workshop.

Total number of ballerinas present for the day's events = Number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day + Number of additional ballerinas for the special workshop
Total number of ballerinas present for the day's events = 129 + 791
Total number of ballerinas present for the day's events = 920

### Answer: 920

Expected answer: 920

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the morning ballet session, instead of 59 ballerinas, there were actually 873 ballerinas practicing. Including the 70 from the afternoon session, how many ballerinas are practicing throughout the day now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day with the updated information.

Given information:
- There are 873 ballerinas practicing in the morning session.
- There are 70 ballerinas practicing in the afternoon session.

Since we still don't have any information about ballerinas practicing in both sessions, we can assume that the morning and afternoon sessions have different sets of ballerinas.

Therefore, to find the total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day, we can add the number of ballerinas in the morning session and the number of ballerinas in the afternoon session.

Total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day = Number of ballerinas in the morning session + Number of ballerinas in the afternoon session
Total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day = 873 + 70
Total number of ballerinas practicing throughout the day = 943

### Answer: 943

Expected answer: 943

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: There were originally 126 pairs of ice skates in a sports store. Over the winter, 110 of them were sold. How many pairs of ice skates does the store have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the original number of pairs of ice skates and the number of pairs sold.

Given information:
- There were originally 126 pairs of ice skates in the sports store.
- Over the winter, 110 pairs of ice skates were sold.

Step 1: Find the number of pairs of ice skates remaining in the store.
Number of pairs remaining = Original number of pairs - Number of pairs sold
Number of pairs remaining = 126 - 110
Number of pairs remaining = 16

Therefore, the sports store has 16 pairs of ice skates left.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, the sports store then received a new shipment of ice skates, raising their total to 216 pairs. After deducting the remaining pairs of ice skates from the original stock, how many pairs of ice skates came in the new shipment?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Originally, the store had 126 pairs of ice skates
* 110 pairs were sold, leaving 16 pairs remaining
* After a new shipment, the total number of pairs is now 216

To find the number of pairs in the new shipment, we need to subtract the remaining pairs from the new total:

New shipment = New total - Remaining pairs
New shipment = 216 - 16
New shipment = 200

Therefore, the new shipment contained 200 pairs of ice skates.

### Answer: 200

Expected answer: 200

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous scenarios, suppose instead of the initial 126 pairs of ice skates in the sports store, there were actually 968 pairs. If the store still sold 110 pairs over the winter as before, how many pairs of ice skates would the store have left after these sales?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

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

Given information:
- There were originally 968 pairs of ice skates in the sports store.
- Over the winter, 110 pairs of ice skates were sold.

Step 1: Find the number of pairs of ice skates remaining in the store.
Number of pairs remaining = Original number of pairs - Number of pairs sold
Number of pairs remaining = 968 - 110
Number of pairs remaining = 858

Therefore, after selling 110 pairs of ice skates over the winter, the sports store would have 858 pairs of ice skates left.

### Answer: 858

Expected answer: 858

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: Jack has a set of 391 building blocks. He uses 368 blocks to build a castle. How many building blocks does he have left?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the difference between the total number of building blocks Jack had and the number of blocks he used to build the castle.

Given information:
- Jack has a set of 391 building blocks.
- Jack used 368 blocks to build a castle.

Step 1: Find the number of building blocks Jack has left.
Number of building blocks left = Total number of building blocks - Number of blocks used to build the castle
Number of building blocks left = 391 - 368
Number of building blocks left = 23

Therefore, Jack has 23 building blocks left after using 368 blocks to build the castle.

### Answer: 23

Expected answer: 23

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: After building the castle, Jack found an old box in his closet, which contained additional 715 building blocks. How many total building blocks does he have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the number of building blocks Jack had left after building the castle and the number of additional building blocks he found in the old box.

Given information:
- Jack had 23 building blocks left after building the castle.
- Jack found an old box containing 715 additional building blocks.

Step 1: Find the total number of building blocks Jack has now.
Total number of building blocks = Number of building blocks left after building the castle + Number of additional building blocks found
Total number of building blocks = 23 + 715
Total number of building blocks = 738

Therefore, Jack now has a total of 738 building blocks after finding the additional 715 building blocks in the old box.

### Answer: 738

Expected answer: 738

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Jack remembered incorrectly initially. He actually had 438 building blocks, not 391, before building his castle. Given this, how many building blocks does he have left after building the castle?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the updated information.

Given information:
- Jack initially had 438 building blocks.
- Jack used 368 blocks to build the castle.

Step 1: Find the number of building blocks Jack has left.
Number of building blocks left = Total number of building blocks - Number of blocks used to build the castle
Number of building blocks left = 438 - 368
Number of building blocks left = 70

Therefore, with the updated information that Jack initially had 438 building blocks, he has 70 building blocks left after using 368 blocks to build the castle.

### Answer: 70

Expected answer: 70

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A baby was receiving 658 milliliters of milk each day. One day, the baby's pediatrician advised to increase the milk intake by 18 milliliters. How much milk is the baby receiving after the increase?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amount of increase to the original amount of milk the baby was receiving.

Given information:
- The baby was receiving 658 milliliters of milk each day.
- The pediatrician advised to increase the milk intake by 18 milliliters.

Step 1: Find the new amount of milk after the increase.
New amount of milk = Original amount of milk + Amount of increase
New amount of milk = 658 milliliters + 18 milliliters
New amount of milk = 658 + 18
New amount of milk = 676 milliliters

Therefore, after the increase, the baby is receiving 676 milliliters of milk.

### Answer: 676

Expected answer: 676

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: A baby was receiving 658 milliliters of milk each day. One day, the baby's pediatrician advised to increase the milk intake by 18 milliliters. How much milk is the baby receiving after the increase? Now, consider that the baby also needs to consume 67 milliliters of water daily in addition to the milk she is receiving. How much total liquid - milk and water - is the baby consuming every day now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:

1. The baby was originally receiving 658 milliliters of milk each day.
2. The pediatrician advised to increase the milk intake by 18 milliliters.
3. After the increase, the baby is receiving 658 + 18 = 676 milliliters of milk each day.
4. The baby also needs to consume 67 milliliters of water daily in addition to the milk.

To find the total liquid (milk and water) the baby is consuming every day now, we need to add the amount of milk and the amount of water.

Total liquid consumed = Amount of milk + Amount of water
Total liquid consumed = 676 milliliters + 67 milliliters
Total liquid consumed = 676 + 67
Total liquid consumed = 743 milliliters

Therefore, the baby is consuming a total of 743 milliliters of liquid (milk and water) every day now.

### Answer: 743

Expected answer: 743

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, the baby was receiving 658 milliliters of milk each day. But let's consider a different situation. Suppose that the baby was initially receiving 380 milliliters of milk each day. If the baby's pediatrician still advised to increase the milk intake by 18 milliliters, how much milk is the baby receiving daily in this new situation?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this new situation, we have the following information:

Given:
- The baby was initially receiving 380 milliliters of milk each day.
- The pediatrician advised to increase the milk intake by 18 milliliters.

To find the new amount of milk the baby is receiving daily after the increase, we need to add the amount of increase to the initial amount of milk.

Step 1: Calculate the new amount of milk after the increase.
New amount of milk = Initial amount of milk + Amount of increase
New amount of milk = 380 milliliters + 18 milliliters
New amount of milk = 380 + 18
New amount of milk = 398 milliliters

Therefore, in this new situation, after the increase advised by the pediatrician, the baby is receiving 398 milliliters of milk daily.

### Answer: 398

Expected answer: 398

Correct? Yes

🔗 Problem

Problem: A bus has a seating capacity of 399. If 29 seats are unavailable due to maintenance, how many seats are available for passengers?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of available seats by subtracting the unavailable seats from the total seating capacity.

Given information:
- The bus has a seating capacity of 399.
- 29 seats are unavailable due to maintenance.

Step 1: Find the number of available seats.
Available seats = Total seating capacity - Unavailable seats
Available seats = 399 - 29
Available seats = 370

Therefore, 370 seats are available for passengers.

### Answer: 370

Expected answer: 370

Correct? Yes

🔗 Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that instead of a bus with 399 seats, the bus service rerouted a bigger bus with 747 seats for maintenance. If the same number of 29 seats were unavailable due to maintenance, how many seats would be available for passengers in the bigger bus?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of available seats in the bigger bus by subtracting the unavailable seats from the total seating capacity.

Given information:
- The bigger bus has a seating capacity of 747.
- 29 seats are unavailable due to maintenance.

Step 1: Find the number of available seats in the bigger bus.
Available seats = Total seating capacity - Unavailable seats
Available seats = 747 - 29
Available seats = 718

Therefore, 718 seats would be available for passengers in the bigger bus.

### Answer: 718

Expected answer: 718

Correct? Yes