Common Core Standard 4.MD.A.2-decimal
This standard covers the following:
Use the four operations to solve word problems involving distances, Intervals of time, liquid volumes, masses of objects, and money, including problems involving simple fractions or decimals, and problems that require expressing measurements given in a larger unit in terms of a smaller unit. Represent measurement quantities using diagrams such as number line diagrams that feature a measurement scale.
Problem: Maria was driving at an average speed of 11.0 miles per hour for 6.7 hours. After completing this stretch, she immediately continued for another 4.3 miles before stopping. What total distance in miles did Maria cover?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Maria covered 11*6.7 = <<11*6.7=73.7>>73.7 miles in the first stretch. Therefore, Maria covered a total of 73.7+4.3 = <<73.7+4.3=78>>78 miles. ### Answer: 78 miles
Expected answer: 78.0000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous problem, suppose Maria was actually driving at an average speed of 11.0 miles per hour for 19 hours before she stopped for a break. After the break, she immediately continued for another 4.3 miles. What would then be the total distance in miles that Maria covered?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Maria covered 11*19 = <<11*19=209>>209 miles in the first stretch. Therefore, Maria covered a total of 209+4.3 = <<209+4.3=213.3>>213.3 miles. ### Answer: 213.3 miles
Expected answer: 213.300000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John had 1 dollar. He multiplied his money by 17 by doing small jobs around his neighborhood. How much money does he have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John increased his money seventeenfold, so now he has 1*17 = $<<1*17=17>>17. ### Answer: $17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose John initially started with 3 dollars instead of 1 dollar. He still multiplied his money by 17 by doing small jobs around his neighborhood. How much money would he have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John increased his money seventeenfold, so now he has 3*17 = $<<3*17=51>>51. ### Answer: $51
Expected answer: 51
Correct? Yes
Problem: You have $24.49 in your wallet and you found a $16 bill on the street. Afterward, you receive $47 from your parent. After receiving the money, how much money do you have in total if you already have $25.93 in your savings account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You had $24.49 + $16.00 = $40.49 in your wallet After receiving money from your parent, you have $40.49 + $47.00 = $87.49 In total, you have $87.49 + $25.93 = $113.42 ### Answer: $113.42
Expected answer: 113.420000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous scenario, instead of finding a $16 bill on the street, you found a $23 bill. How much money do you have in total now (considering the $47 you receive from your parent and the $25.93 in your savings account)?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You had $24.49 + $23.00 = $47.49 in your wallet. After receiving money from your parent, you have $47.49 + $47.00 = $94.49 In total, you have $94.49 + $25.93 = $120.42 ### Answer: $120.42
Expected answer: 120.420000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Danny had $49 saved up. He received $8 as a gift from his grandpa. How much money does Danny have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the gift money to Danny's savings: $49 + $8 = $<<49+8=57>>57 ### Answer: $57
Expected answer: 57
Correct? Yes
Problem: After receiving the $8 from his grandpa, Danny found $45 he had hidden in a secret compartment of his piggy bank last year. How much money does he now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Danny started with $57 and then found another $45. We need to add these amounts: $57 + $45 = $<<57+45=102>>102 ### Answer: $102
Expected answer: 102
Correct? Yes
Problem: If initially, Danny had saved up $49 and he received $17 instead of $8 from his grandpa, how much money would he have then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the new gift amount to Danny's initial savings: $49 + $17 = $<<49+17=66>>66. ### Answer: $66
Expected answer: 66
Correct? Yes
Problem: A car travels a distance of 775.644 miles on 43.6 gallons of fuel. How many miles does the car travel per gallon of fuel?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find out how many miles the car travels per gallon, we divide the total distance traveled by the total gallons of fuel used: 775.644 miles / 43.6 gallons = 17.786 miles per gallon. ### Answer: 17.786 miles per gallon.
Expected answer: 17.7900000000000
Correct? No
Problem: Eva has a garden that is 3 meters wide. She decides to extend it by 22.6 meters. After she does this, she has a garden that is as long as the width of the original garden times the total length after the extension. What is now the total area of Eva's garden in square meters?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First find the total length of the garden: 3 meters + 22.6 meters = 25.6 meters Then multiply that length by the original width to find the total area: 25.6 meters * 3 meters = 76.8 square meters. ### Answer: 76.8 square meters
Expected answer: 76.8000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Now suppose that Eva decides to make her garden even bigger. She alters her plan, and now the first width of her garden is going to be 16 meters instead of 3 meters. After extending it by 22.6 meters just as before, she again stretches the garden out until it is as long as the width of the original garden times the total length after the extension. What is now the total area of Eva's garden in square meters?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First find the total length of the garden: 16 meters + 22.6 meters = 38.6 meters Then multiply that length by the original width to find the total area: 38.6 meters * 16 meters = 617.6 square meters. ### Answer: 617.6 square meters
Expected answer: 617.600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A cyclist has 19 days to travel a race that is 8.9 miles long each day. He also received a bonus of 38 miles from the previous race. In total, how many miles does he have to ride for this race?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The cyclist needs to ride 8.9 x 19 = <<8.9*19=169.1>>169.1 miles. Adding the bonus miles, he needs to ride 169.1 + 38 = <<169.1+38=207.1>>207.1 miles in total. ### Answer: 207.1
Expected answer: 207.100000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous cycling competition, the cyclist had to travel 41 miles each day for 19 days and received a bonus of 38 miles. How many miles in total did he have to travel for that race?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The cyclist needed to travel 41 x 19 = <<41*19=779>>779 miles during the race. Adding the bonus miles, he needed to travel 779 + 38 = <<779+38=817>>817 miles in total. ### Answer: 817
Expected answer: 817
Correct? Yes
Problem: Bob travels 6.1 miles to the grocery store. His total trip (going and coming back) is the summation of his distance to the grocery and back home. If he makes this trip 3 times a week, how many miles does he travel in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Bob travels 6.1 miles to the grocery store, and the same distance back home, so his total distance for one trip is 6.1 miles * 2 = 12.2 miles. Over three trips, he travels 12.2 miles/trip * 3 trips = 36.6 miles. ### Answer: 36.6 miles.
Expected answer: 36.6000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In addition to his trips to the grocery store, Bob also drives an extra 36 miles each week to visit his grandmother. Taking into account his trips to the grocery store and his visits to his grandmother, how many miles does Bob drive in total every week?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We know from the previous problem that Bob travels 36.6 miles each week going to and from the grocery store. Adding his trips to his grandmother's house, he travels 36.6 miles + 36 miles = 72.6 miles every week. ### Answer: 72.6 miles
Expected answer: 72.6000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In a different scenario, Bob's grandmother lives 36 miles away, instead of the original distance. If Bob were still to visit her and return home three times a week, how many miles would he be driving in total just for these visits?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: A trip to his grandmother's house and back is 36 miles * 2 = 72 miles. So, in three trips, Bob drives 72 miles/trip * 3 trips = 216 miles. ### Answer: 216 miles.
Expected answer: 216.000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: You have $863.2 in your bank account and you decide to spend an equal amount every day for 33.2 days. How much money will you spend each day?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You will spend $863.2 / 33.2 = $<<863.2/33.2=26>>26 each day. ### Answer: $26
Expected answer: 26.0000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following up on the previous scenario: suppose instead of spending your savings over 33.2 days, you decided to stretch the same amount over 47 days. How much would you have to spend each day now to keep within the same budget of $863.2?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You would need to spend $863.2 / 47 = $<<863.2/47=18.36595744680851>>18.37 each day (rounding to the nearest cent). ### Answer: $18.37
Expected answer: 18.3659574468085
Correct? Yes
Problem: Maria saved $32.5 from her part-time job and $34 from her previous savings. She spent $7 on a gift for her sister and $7 for her brother at the end of the week. How much money does Maria have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Maria saved a total of $32.5 + $34 = <<32.5+34=66.5>>$66.5 from her job and previous savings. She spent a total of $7 + $7 = <<7+7=14>>$14 on gifts for her siblings. Maria has $66.5 - $14 = <<66.5-14=52.5>>$52.5 left. ### Answer: $52.5
Expected answer: 52.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After calculating the money left, Maria found an old wallet containing $38. How much money does Maria total have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Maria had $52.5 left from her savings and gifts. After finding $38 in an old wallet, Maria now has a total of $52.5 + $38 = <<52.5+38=90.5>>$90.5. ### Answer: $90.5
Expected answer: 90.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If the cost of diesel is $22.49 per gallon and a truck uses 38.04 gallons on a trip, how much does the fuel for the trip cost in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The total cost is calculated by multiplying the cost per gallon by the number of gallons used: $22.49/gallon * 38.04 gallons = $856.10. ### Answer: $856.10
Expected answer: 855.519600000000
Correct? No
Problem: You just got a new job paying $13 per hour. How much will you earn if you work for 1 hour?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You earn $13 each hour you work. ### Answer: $13
Expected answer: 13
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, now let's say you also had individual donations amounting to $7. After receiving your salary, how much money did you have once you subtracted the total amount of your donations?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You earned $13 and donated $7, leaving you with 13-7 = $<<13-7=6>>6. ### Answer: $6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the previous scenario, imagine instead that your new job paid $4 per hour. How much would you earn if you worked for 1 hour?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You earn $4 each hour you work. ### Answer: $4
Expected answer: 4
Correct? Yes
Problem: A vehicle travels 367.8 miles on a full tank of gas that holds 15 gallons. How many miles does the vehicle travel per gallon of gas?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to divide the total miles traveled by the number of gallons the tank holds: 367.8 miles / 15 gallons = <<367.8/15=24.52>>24.52 miles per gallon. ### Answer: 24.52 miles per gallon
Expected answer: 24.5200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After finding the distance the vehicle travels per gallon of gas, if the number of miles it can travel per gallon is squared, what would be the resulting number?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We found that the vehicle travels 24.52 miles per gallon. Squaring a number means multiplying it by itself: 24.52 * 24.52 = <<24.52*24.52=601.2304>>601.2304. ### Answer: 601.2304
Expected answer: 601.230400000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If the vehicle's gas tank held 20 gallons instead of 15 gallons, but it still traveled 367.8 miles on a full tank, how many miles would the vehicle travel per gallon of gas now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to divide the total miles traveled by the new number of gallons the tank holds: 367.8 miles / 20 gallons = <<367.8/20 = 18.39>>18.39 miles per gallon. ### Answer: 18.39 miles per gallon
Expected answer: 18.3900000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has $16.9 and his sister gives him an extra $19.0. After receiving the money, he discovers an old $3 bill in his pocket. How much money does John have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First, we calculate the total amount John has after his sister's gift: $16.9 + $19.0 = $35.9 Then, we add the $3 he found: $35.9 + $3 = $38.9 ### Answer: $38.9
Expected answer: 38.9000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After counting his money, John decides to deposit the money into his bank account. In the bank, he remembers that he already has $31.4 in his account. After depositing all of his money, how much does John have in his bank account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John had $38.90 and deposits it into his account, which had $31.40. Therefore, the total in his account is $38.90 + $31.40 = $70.30 ### Answer: $70.30
Expected answer: 70.3000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A drone flies at a constant speed of 7.8 km per hour. How far in km can it travel in 24 hours if it doesn't stop or slow down?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The drone's speed is 7.8 km per hour, meaning it covers 7.8 km every hour. To find the total distance it travels in 24 hours, we multiply its speed by the time traveled: 7.8 km/hour * 24 hours = <<7.8*24=187.2>>187.2 km. ### Answer: 187.2 km
Expected answer: 187.200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If a drone flies at a constant speed of 7.8 km per hour for 24 hours and then continues to fly an additional 31 km, how far in total would it have traveled?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We know from the previous problem that the drone travels 187.2 km in the first 24 hours. Adding the additional 31 km traveled, the total distance becomes 187.2 km + 31 km = <<187.2+31=218.2>>218.2 km. ### Answer: 218.2 km
Expected answer: 218.200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If the drone was actually flying at a constant speed of 7.8 km per hour for 30 hours instead of 24 hours, without taking into account the additional 31 km it flew afterwards, how far in total would it have traveled in those 30 hours?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The drone's speed is 7.8 km per hour, meaning it covers 7.8 km every hour. To find the total distance it travels in 30 hours, we multiply its speed by the time traveled: 7.8 km/hour * 30 hours = <<7.8*30=234>>234 km. ### Answer: 234 km
Expected answer: 234.000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Emily has saved $9.12 from doing household chores. Her mother then gives her an additional $16.00 as a monthly allowance. How much money does Emily now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Emily now has $9.12 + $16.00 = <<9.12+16=25.12>>$25.12 ### Answer: $25.12
Expected answer: 25.1200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Emily's grandmother has heard about her diligent savings and decides to contribute by giving her $1.53. Given the money she already has from chores and allowance, how much money does Emily now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Emily's total savings are now $25.12 + $1.53 = <<25.12+1.53=26.65>>$26.65 ### Answer: $26.65
Expected answer: 26.6500000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Emily thought she was given $16.00 as a monthly allowance, but her mother actually gave her $47.00. Given the $9.12 she has from chores and the corrected amount of allowance, how much money does Emily now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Emily now has $9.12 + $47.00 = <<9.12+47=56.12>>$56.12 ### Answer: $56.12
Expected answer: 56.1200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: James had $24.31 in his wallet. After buying a sandwich for $22, how much money does he have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find out how much money James has left, we need to subtract the cost of the sandwich from his initial amount: $24.31 - $22 = $<<24.31-22=2.31>>2.31 ### Answer: $2.31
Expected answer: 2.31000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John had $37.3 in his savings account. He went to the store and spent $8. How much money does he have left in his savings account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find out how much money John has left, we need to subtract his spending from his savings: $37.3 - $8 = $29.3 ### Answer: $29.3
Expected answer: 29.3000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John had $37.3 in his savings account. He went to the store and spent $8. How much money does he have left in his savings account? Later that day, his grandmother gives him $12.0 for his birthday. How much money does he have now in his savings account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find out how much money John has left after going to the store, we need to subtract his spending from his savings: $37.3 - $8 = $29.3 Then we need to add his birthday money from his grandmother to find his new total: $29.3 + $12.0 = $41.3 ### Answer: $41.3
Expected answer: 41.3000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the original scenario, John had $37.3 in his savings. However, what if he had $40 instead, and he still went to the store and spent the same amount of $8. How much would he have left in his savings account then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We can find the remaining amount by subtracting his spending from his initial savings: $40 - $8 = $32 ### Answer: $32
Expected answer: 32
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mary bought a dress for $45 but got a $8 discount. She now wants to buy the same dress for her 1.77 twin sisters. How much will it cost her?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The discounted price of one dress is $45 - $8 = <<45-8=37>>$37. The price of three dresses is $37 x 3 = <<37*3=111>>$111. ### Answer: $111
Expected answer: 65.4900000000000
Correct? No
Problem: Harrison has $43 in his bank account. He then receives a gift from his grandmother of an amount equal to $38.32 plus the original amount he had in his account. After receiving the gift, how much money does Harrison have altogether?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The gift amount is $38.32 + $43 = <<38.32+43=81.32>>$81.32. After the gift, Harrison has $81.32 + $43 = <<81.32+43=124.32>>$124.32 ### Answer: $124.32
Expected answer: 124.320000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose Harrison only had $43 in his bank account and he received another cash gift from his relatives which is $38.32 more than the original amount he had. If his grandmother didn't give him an extra $43, how much money does he have in his account now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The cash gift from his relatives is $43 + $38.32 = <<43+38.32=81.32>>$81.32. The total amount in his account now is $43 + $81.32 = <<43+81.32=124.32>>$124.32. ### Answer: $124.32
Expected answer: 124.320000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In a relay race, Tom ran 8.4 miles, and Jerry ran 43.4 miles. Then, Spike took over and ran 31 miles more. What is the total miles that the team have ran?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Spike ran a total of 31 + 43.4 = <<31+43.4 = 74.4>>74.4 miles. The total miles that the team ran is 8.4 + 43.4 + 74.4 = <<8.4+43.4+74.4=126.2>>126.2 miles. ### Answer: 126.2 miles
Expected answer: 82.8000000000000
Correct? No
Problem: David has 984.4 dollars and wants to save an equal amount every week for the next 23 weeks. How much money should he save each week?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find out how much money David should save each week, we need to divide his total savings by the number of weeks: 984.4 dollars / 23 weeks = 42.8 dollars/week. ### Answer: 42.8 dollars/week.
Expected answer: 42.8000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous problem, David decided to save 984.4 dollars over 23 weeks. But what if David actually only had 28 dollars to begin with? How much would he have to save each week then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find out how much David would have to save each week, we divide his total savings goal by the number of weeks: 28 dollars / 23 weeks = 1.217 dollars/week (rounded to three decimal places). ### Answer: 1.217 dollars/week
Expected answer: 28/23
Correct? No
Problem: Zara decided to save some of her money for her summer trip. Every week, she saved $29. After 17 weeks, how much money did she save in total for her trip?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount of money Zara saved, we can multiply her weekly savings by the number of weeks she saved money. Zara saved a total of $29/week * 17 weeks = $<<29*17=493>>493. ### Answer: $493
Expected answer: 493
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following her original plan, Zara managed to save $29 each week for 17 weeks for her summer trip. Then, she unexpectedly received an extra $31 from her grandma. How much money does she now have in total for her trip?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First find the total amount Zara saved over the 17 weeks: $29/week * 17 weeks = $493 Then add the gift from her grandma to find the total amount she has saved: $493 + $31 = $524 ### Answer: $524
Expected answer: 524
Correct? Yes
Problem: Zara originally planned to save $29 each week for 17 weeks, but she had to adjust and only save $22 each week instead. How much money would she have saved at the end of the 17 weeks with her adjusted saving plan?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total saved with the adjusted plan, multiply her new weekly savings by the number of weeks. Zara would save $22/week * 17 weeks = $<<22*17=374>>374. ### Answer: $374
Expected answer: 374
Correct? Yes
Problem: Samuel has a total of 176 liters of paint. He wants to distribute it evenly into 8 barrels. How many liters of paint will there be in each barrel?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To distribute the paint evenly, we divide the total amount of paint by the number of barrels: 176 liters / 8 barrels = 22 liters/barrel ### Answer: 22 liters
Expected answer: 22
Correct? Yes
Problem: If Samuel decides to fill 43 barrels with the same quantity of paint as before, how many liters of paint will he need in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: He needs 22 liters per barrel, and he wants to fill 43 barrels, so he needs a total of 22 liters/barrel * 43 barrels = 946 liters of paint. ### Answer: 946 liters
Expected answer: 946
Correct? Yes
Problem: If Samuel had started with only 176 liters of paint and decided to distribute it evenly into 29 barrels instead of 43, how many liters of paint would there be in each barrel?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To distribute the paint evenly, we divide the total amount of paint by the number of barrels: 176 liters / 29 barrels ≈ 6.07 liters/barrel ### Answer: Approximately 6.07 liters
Expected answer: 176/29
Correct? No
Problem: Mark bought 29 shirts for his clothing business, with each shirt costing $17. But he got a $1 discount on the total cost. How much did he pay in total for the shirts?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The total cost before the discount was 29*17 = $<<29*17=493>>493 After the discount, Mark paid 493-1 = $<<493-1=492>>492 ### Answer: $492
Expected answer: 492
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous situation, after buying the shirts, Mark decided to also purchase a tie which cost him $6.62. How much did he end up spending in total for the shirts and the tie?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Mark's total expense was the cost of the shirts plus the cost of the tie, 492 + 6.62 = $<<492+6.62=498.62>>498.62 ### Answer: $498.62
Expected answer: 498.620000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Going back to the initial scenario, suppose the number of shirts Mark bought was 39 instead of 29, with each shirt still costing $17. He still received a $1 discount on the total cost. How much did he pay in total for the shirts now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The total cost before the discount was 39*17 = $<<39*17=663>>663 After the discount, Mark paid 663-1 = $<<663-1=662>>662 ### Answer: $662
Expected answer: 662
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sarah buys 9 books from a bookstore where each book costs $27.99. She also purchases a magazine for $9. What is the total cost of Sarah's purchase?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The 9 books cost 9 * $27.99 = $<<9*27.99=251.91>>251.91 Adding the price of the magazine, the total cost is $251.91 + $9 = $<<251.91+9=260.91>>260.91 ### Answer: $260.91
Expected answer: 260.910000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After Sarah's purchase of books and the magazine, she decided to buy a board game which costs $30.3. What is the final total cost of Sarah's purchases?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We know from the previous problem that Sarah's book and magazine purchases total $260.91. Adding the cost of the board game gives us a final total of $260.91 + $30.3 = $<<260.91+30.3=291.21>>291.21 ### Answer: $291.21
Expected answer: 291.210000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose that instead of the books costing $27.99 each, they actually cost $50 each. Now, how much will the total cost be for the 9 books and the magazine?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The 9 books cost 9 * $50 = $<<9*50=450>>450. Adding the price of the magazine, the total cost is $450 + $9 = $<<450+9=459>>459. ### Answer: $459
Expected answer: 459
Correct? Yes
Problem: Susan has 11 dollars in her purse and she found 14 dollars in her desk draw. After adding the money she found to her purse, she then earned another 23 dollars from doing chores. How much money does she have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Susan has 11 + 14 = <<11+14=25>>25 dollars after finding money in her desk drawer. Adding her chore money, Susan now has a total of 25 + 23 = <<25+23=48>>48 dollars. ### Answer: 48 dollars.
Expected answer: 48
Correct? Yes
Problem: After counting her money, Susan then spent $12.18 on a new book. How much money does she have left after buying the book?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Susan started with $48 and spent $12.18, so she has 48 - 12.18 = <<48-12.18=35.82>>35.82 dollars left. ### Answer: 35.82 dollars.
Expected answer: 35.8200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Let's revise Susan's story a bit. Suppose that instead of finding 14 dollars in her desk drawer, she only found 6 dollars. If she still earned another 23 dollars from chores, how much money would she have then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Susan has 11 + 6 = <<11+6=17>>17 dollars after finding money in her desk drawer. Adding her chore money, Susan now has a total of 17 + 23 = <<17+23=40>>40 dollars. ### Answer: 40 dollars.
Expected answer: 40
Correct? Yes
Problem: Susan has $46 in her wallet. She spends $45 on a new toy robot. How much money does she currently have left in her wallet?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Susan has $46 - $45 = <<46-45=1>>$1 left in her wallet. ### Answer: $1
Expected answer: 1
Correct? Yes
Problem: Susan had $46 in her wallet. After she spent $45 on a new toy robot, her mother noticed her sadness for having only $1 left and decided to give her the same amount as she initially had ($46). How much money does Susan have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Susan's mother gave her $46, and she had $1 left, making a total of $1 + $46 = <<1+46=47>>$47. ### Answer: $47
Expected answer: 47
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of spending $45 on a toy robot, what if Susan decided to save a bit more money and spent only $40 on a less expensive robot? How much money would she have left in her wallet now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: If Susan spends $40, she will have $46 - $40 = <<46-40=6>>$6 left. ### Answer: $6
Expected answer: 6
Correct? Yes
Problem: Alex has $35.79 saved in his piggy bank. His grandma gave him $8 for his birthday. How much does Alex have now after receiving his birthday money?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the money Alex got for his birthday to the money he already had saved. That means Alex has $35.79 + $8= $<<35.79+8=43.79>>43.79 ### Answer: $43.79
Expected answer: 43.7900000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if Alex initially had $45 in his piggy bank instead of $35.79, then received the same $8 from his grandma. How much money does he have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We can find the total amount by adding the money from his grandma to the initial amount in his piggy bank. That means Alex now has $45 + $8 = $<<45+8=53>>53 ### Answer: $53
Expected answer: 53
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has $37 in his bank account. If he receives an additional $8 from his mother, how much money does he now have in his account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John's total money is calculated by adding his initial amount to the additional amount received: $37 + $8 = $45 ### Answer: $45
Expected answer: 45
Correct? Yes
Problem: John used $4 of his total money to pay for a bus ticket. How much money does he have left now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find out how much money John has left, subtract the cost of the bus ticket from his total money: $45 - $4 = $41 ### Answer: $41
Expected answer: 41
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jim has $43.59 in his savings account. He receives his pocket money of $2.2. How much money does he have now in his savings account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the pocket money to the initial savings: $43.59 + $2.2 = $<<43.59+2.2=45.79>>45.79 ### Answer: $45.79
Expected answer: 45.7900000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After Jim adds his pocket money of $2.2 to his savings account total of $43.59, he decides to deposit an additional $25.2 that he earned from helping his neighbor with yard work. How much money does he have in his savings account now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Jim's total savings after adding his pocket money is $45.79. We need to add his earnings from yard work to that amount: $45.79 + $25.2 = $<<45.79+25.2=71.00>>71.00 ### Answer: $71.00
Expected answer: 70.9900000000000
Correct? No
Problem: After helping his neighbor with yard work, instead of starting with $43.59, Jim only had $29 in his savings account initially. After adding his pocket money of $2.2, how much money does he have in his savings account now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add his pocket money to his initial savings: $29 + $2.2 = $<<29+2.2=31.2>>31.2 ### Answer: $31.2
Expected answer: 31.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has $36.92 in his wallet. After his birthday, he gets an additional $18.42 from his grandmother. How much money does John have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the money John got for his birthday to the money he already had. This means we need to sum $36.92 and $18.42 Adding $36.92 and $18.42 we get $36.92 + $18.42 = $55.34 ### Answer: $55.34
Expected answer: 55.3400000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous scenario, John had $36.92 in his wallet and received an additional $18.42 from his grandmother. But what if instead of getting $18.42, John only got $6 from his grandmother for his birthday. How much money does John have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Since John received $6.00 from his grandmother, we need to add that amount to the original amount in his wallet, which was $36.92. Adding those amounts gives us $36.92 + $6.00 = $42.92. ### Answer: $42.92
Expected answer: 42.9200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sarah had $38.45 in her savings account. She added another $39 to it. Later, she received a gift of $44.5. How much money does Sarah now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After adding $39, Sarah had $38.45 + $39 = <<38.45+39=77.45>>$77.45. After receiving the gift, she has $77.45 + $44.5 = <<77.45+44.5=121.95>>$121.95 ### Answer: $121.95
Expected answer: 121.950000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sarah decided to not deposit $39 but only a total of $31 to add to her existing savings of $38.45. If she still received the gift of $44.5, how much money does she now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After adding $31, Sarah had $38.45 + $31 = <<38.45+31=69.45>>$69.45. After receiving the gift, she has $69.45 + $44.5 = <<69.45+44.5=113.95>>$113.95 ### Answer: $113.95
Expected answer: 113.950000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Tom has a savings of $17.44. He found a $23.3 bill on the street. How much money does he now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount of money, we need to add his savings to the money he found: $17.44 + $23.3 = $40.74 ### Answer: $40.74
Expected answer: 40.7400000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Tom decided to save a little more and added $1 to his total savings. How much money does he have now in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Tom's total savings was $40.74, and he added $1, so his new total is $40.74 + $1 = $41.74 ### Answer: $41.74
Expected answer: 41.7400000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After careful consideration, Tom realized he initially had $18, not $17.44. If he found the same $23.3 on the street, how much would he have in total now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the money he actually had to the money he found: $18 + $23.3 = $41.3 ### Answer: $41.3
Expected answer: 41.3000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If a car consumes 615 liters of gas every 41 hours, how many liters of gas will it consume in 30 hours?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The car consumes 615 liters / 41 hours = <<615/41=15>>15 liters of gas every hour. Therefore, the car will consume 15 liters/hour * 30 hours = <<15*30=450>>450 liters of gas in 30 hours. ### Answer: 450 liters
Expected answer: 450
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, if a car consumes 615 liters of gas every 41 hours, and it has consumed gas for 30 hours. But because of a leak, it lost 46.33 liters of that gas. How many liters of gas remain in the car?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: As previously calculated, the car consumed 450 liters of gas in 30 hours. Due to the leak, the car lost 450 liters - 46.33 liters = <<450-46.33=403.67>>403.67 liters of gas. ### Answer: 403.67 liters
Expected answer: 403.670000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, what if the car's fuel consumption rate was instead 615 liters every 23 hours? How many liters of gas would it consume in 30 hours at this new rate?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The car consumes 615 liters / 23 hours = <<615/23=26.74>>26.74 liters of gas every hour (rounded to two decimal places). Therefore, the car will consume 26.74 liters/hour * 30 hours = <<26.74*30=802.2>>802.2 liters of gas in 30 hours. ### Answer: 802.2 liters
Expected answer: 18450/23
Correct? No
Problem: Emma has $38 in her wallet. After buying a book she only had $32.6 left. How much did the book cost?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The book cost $38 - $32.6 = <<38-32.6=5.4>>$5.4 ### Answer: $5.4
Expected answer: 5.40000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Stacey spent 20 dollars on books and another 35 dollars on school supplies. Later in the day, she decided to buy a backpack that cost 41 dollars more than her total earlier expenses. How much money did Stacey spend in all?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Stacey spent 20+35 = <<20+35=55>>55 dollars on books and school supplies. The backpack cost 55+41 = <<55+41=96>>96 dollars. In all, Stacey spent 55+96 = <<55+96=151>>151 dollars. ### Answer: 151 dollars.
Expected answer: 96
Correct? No
Problem: A car completes a journey of 176.0 miles in 20.0 hours. How many miles does the car travel per hour?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The car travels 176.0 / 20.0 = <<176.0/20.0=8.8>>8.8 miles per hour. ### Answer: 8.8 miles per hour.
Expected answer: 8.80000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Kaden's piggy bank has $9.9. He then adds $30.3 to his piggy bank. How much money does Kaden have in his piggy bank now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to sum up the amount Kaden had and the amount he added: $9.9 + $30.3 = $40.2 ### Answer: $40.2
Expected answer: 40.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Kaden thought back and realized he actually started with $13 in his piggy bank instead of $9.9 before adding the $30.3. How much money would he have had in his piggy bank then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to sum up the correct starting amount Kaden had and the amount he added: $13 + $30.3 = $43.3 ### Answer: $43.3
Expected answer: 43.3000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Joe had $42.9 in his wallet, but he spent $34. How much money does Joe have left in his wallet now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Joe has $42.9-$34.00 = $<<42.9-34=8.9>>8.90 left in his wallet. ### Answer: $8.90
Expected answer: 8.90000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following on from the previous problem, Joe found a toy he wanted to buy for $35.44. After spending $34, how much more money does he need in order to buy the toy?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Joe needs $35.44 - $8.90 = $<<35.44-8.90=26.54>>26.54 more to buy the toy. ### Answer: $26.54
Expected answer: 26.5400000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following on from the previous problem, suppose Joe originally had $43 in his wallet instead of $42.9. After spending $34, how much money does Joe have left in his wallet now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Joe has $43.00-$34.00 = $<<43-34=9>>9.00 left in his wallet. ### Answer: $9.00
Expected answer: 9
Correct? Yes
Problem: You bought a car for $303.5756 and you decided to pay it off in 19.51 monthly installments. After calculating, you find the amount for each monthly installment. If you add $41.35 to your monthly installments for car insurance, what is your total monthly payment for your car and insurance?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You will be paying $303.5756 / 19.51 = <<303.5756/19.51=15.56>>$15.56 for each monthly installment. Adding the cost of insurance, your total monthly payment will be $15.56 + $41.35 = <<15.56+41.35=56.91>>$56.91. ### Answer: $56.91
Expected answer: 56.9100000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In addition to your monthly car payment and insurance, you also budget $7.4 each month for car maintenance. What, then, would be your total monthly expense related to your car taking into account payment for the car itself, insurance, and maintenance?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Your total monthly car expenses would be $56.91 (payment and insurance) + $7.40 (maintenance) = <<56.91+7.40=64.31>>$64.31. ### Answer: $64.31
Expected answer: 64.3100000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if instead of $303.5756, the total cost of your car was only $41, and you decided to pay it off in 19.51 equal monthly installments. If you still add $41.35 for your monthly car insurance, how much would be your total monthly spending for your car payment and insurance then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Your monthly car payment would be $41 / 19.51 = <<41/19.51=2.10>>$2.10. Adding your monthly insurance, your total monthly spending would be $2.10 + $41.35 = <<2.10+41.35=43.45>>$43.45. ### Answer: $43.45
Expected answer: 43.4514864172219
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has $28.2 in his wallet. He received an additional $8 from his friend. How much money does he have now in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the amount John received from his friend to his existing amount: $28.2 + $8 = $36.2 ### Answer: $36.2
Expected answer: 36.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After initially having $28.2 plus $8, John decides to count his money again and realizes he actually started with $35 and still received $8 from his friend. How much money does he have now in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the amount John received from his friend to his corrected starting amount: $35 + $8 = $43 ### Answer: $43
Expected answer: 43
Correct? Yes
Problem: Lisa has 30.3 acres of farmland and she recently bought another plot of 5.9 acres. What is the total acreage of Lisa's farmland now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The total acreage is 30.3 + 5.9 = <<30.3+5.9=36.2>>36.2 acres. ### Answer: 36.2 acres
Expected answer: 36.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Lisa has a twin sister, Mona, who also has exactly the same amount of farmland as Lisa does. If Lisa has 30.3 acres of farmland and she recently bought another plot of 5.9 acres, how much total land do Lisa and Mona have combined now, considering that they both have the same amount of land?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Lisa's total farmland is now 30.3 + 5.9 = <<30.3+5.9=36.2>>36.2 acres. Since Mona also has 36.2 acres, together they have 36.2 x 2 = <<36.2*2=72.4>>72.4 acres. ### Answer: 72.4 acres
Expected answer: 72.4000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John saved $16 from his weekly allowance. On his birthday, his grandmother gave him $25.17 as a gift. How much money does John have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add John's savings and his grandmother's gift to find the total amount of money he has. This means adding $16 + $25.17 = $<<16+25.17=41.17>>41.17 ### Answer: $41.17
Expected answer: 41.1700000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In addition to the money John saved from his allowance and his birthday gift, he also earned $20.9 from mowing the neighbor's lawn. How much money does John have in total now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: From the previous problem, John has $41.17. To find the total amount of money John has now, we need to add his earnings from mowing the lawn to his current total. This means adding $41.17 + $20.9 = $<<41.17+20.9=62.07>>62.07. ### Answer: $62.07
Expected answer: 62.0700000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Joanna is saving money to buy a new bike. She decides to save $32.2 every week. After 17.38 weeks, how much money will she have saved?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to multiply the amount of money Joanna saves every week by the number of weeks she is saving: 32.2 * 17.38 = <<32.2*17.38=560.036>>560.036. ### Answer: $560.036
Expected answer: 559.636000000000
Correct? No
Problem: John has 48 dollars in his wallet. He bought a new book that cost him 18 dollars. How much money does he have left in his wallet now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John has 48 - 18 = <<48-18=30>>30 dollars left in his wallet. ### Answer: 30 dollars.
Expected answer: 30
Correct? Yes
Problem: John originally had 32 dollars in his wallet, not 48. After spending 18 dollars on a book, how much money does he have left in his wallet now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John has 32 - 18 = <<32-18=14>>14 dollars left in his wallet. ### Answer: 14 dollars.
Expected answer: 14
Correct? Yes
Problem: A student has $39.4 in his bank account initially. He earned $5 from selling used textbooks. How much money is now in his bank account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We must add the amount of money he earned to the initial amount in his bank account. This gives us a total of $39.4 + $5 = $<<39.4+5=44.4>>44.4. ### Answer: $44.4
Expected answer: 44.4000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: I have $38, and then I bought a toy for $3. After that, I was given $40. How much money do I have in total now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After buying the toy, you have $38 - $3 = <<38-3=35>>$35 left. After being given $40, you have $35 + $40 = <<35+40=75>>$75 in total. ### Answer: $75
Expected answer: 75
Correct? Yes
Problem: If originally, I had $46 instead of $38 and after I bought the same toy for $3, then I was given the exact same amount of $40. How much money do I have in total now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After buying the toy, you have $46 - $3 = <<46-3=43>>$43 left. After being given $40, you have $43 + $40 = <<43+40=83>>$83 in total. ### Answer: $83
Expected answer: 83
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sally ran 38.5 miles in a week. On the next week, she decided to increase her distance by 2 miles. How many miles did she run in the next week?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Sally ran 38.5 + 2 = <<38.5+2=40.5>>40.5 miles the next week. ### Answer: 40.5
Expected answer: 40.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If initially, instead of increasing her distance by 2 miles in the second week, Sally had decided to increase her mileage by 41 miles. How many miles would she have run in the second week?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Sally would have run 38.5 + 41 = <<38.5+41=79.5>>79.5 miles in the second week. ### Answer: 79.5
Expected answer: 79.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A farmer buys pesticide for his farm. Each bottle of pesticide costs $16.01. If he buys 17 bottles, how much money does he spend?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: He spends 16.01*17 = <<16.01*17=272.17>>272.17 dollars on pesticide. ### Answer: $272.17
Expected answer: 272.170000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After buying the pesticide, the farmer receives a discount coupon that allows him to save $26. After applying the coupon, how much does he spend in total for the 17 bottles of pesticide?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: He spends 272.17-26 = <<272.17-26=246.17>>246.17 dollars after the discount. ### Answer: $246.17
Expected answer: 246.170000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: The farmer is considering a different pesticide that costs $23 per bottle. If the farmer were to buy 17 bottles of this other pesticide instead, how much would it cost him in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The total cost would be 23*17 = <<23*17=391>>391 dollars. ### Answer: $391
Expected answer: 391
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jim spent $28 on groceries and then $44.99 on a new shirt. How much money did he spend in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount spent, we add the cost of the groceries and the shirt: $28 + $44.99 = $72.99 ### Answer: $72.99
Expected answer: 72.9900000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jim spent $28 on groceries and then $44.99 on a new shirt. Later, he decided to buy a book for $18.16. How much money did he spend in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: He spent $28 + $44.99 = $72.99 on groceries and a shirt. Adding the price of the book, he spent a total of $72.99 + $18.16 = $91.15. ### Answer: $91.15
Expected answer: 91.1500000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the first shopping trip, Jim spent $28 on groceries and then $44.99 on a new shirt. On a later trip, he spent $28 on groceries again, but this time he bought a different shirt for $41. How much money did he spend in total on the second trip?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount Jim spent on the second trip, we add the cost of the groceries and the second shirt: $28 + $41 = $69 ### Answer: $69
Expected answer: 69
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has $13.8 in his savings account. After doing some chores, his mom gives him additional $3. How much money does John have in his savings account now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount, we need to add the initial amount to the additional amount: $13.8 + $3 = $16.8 ### Answer: $16.8
Expected answer: 16.8000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Continuing from the previous scenarios, let's say John initially had $31 in his savings account instead of $13.8. After doing his chores, his mom gives him an additional $3. How much money would John have in his savings account then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the money John received from his mom to his initial savings: $31 + $3 = $34 ### Answer: $34
Expected answer: 34
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has $19 in his wallet and he finds $5 on the street. After adding this to his wallet, he discovers a forgotten envelope with $27.97 in it, which he also adds to his wallet. He then heads to a collector's flea market, where he buys 17 vintage comic books, each costing the total amount he currently has in his wallet. How much does he spend in total on the comic books?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After finding $5, John has $19 + $5 = <<19+5=24>>$24. After finding the envelope, he has $24 + $27.97 = <<24+27.97=51.97>>$51.97. He spends his entire $51.97 on the 17 comic books. ### Answer: $51.97
Expected answer: 883.490000000000
Correct? No
Problem: John has $35.6 in his wallet. After buying a chocolate bar for $32, he receives some money from his friend who owed him $46.3, which amount is aslo added to his wallet. Later, his grandmother gave him an extra $12.9. How much money does he have now in his wallet?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After buying the chocolate bar, John has $35.6 - $32 = $<<35.6-32=3.6>>3.6 left. After receiving money from his friend, John has $3.6 + $46.3 = $<<3.6+46.3=49.9>>49.9 in his wallet. Finally, after his grandmother gives him more money, John has $49.9 + $12.9 = $<<49.9+12.9=62.8>>62.8 in his wallet. ### Answer: $62.8
Expected answer: 62.8000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Previously, John had $35.6 in his wallet and spent $32 on a chocolate bar. But what if instead, John had initially the same amount of money but decided to buy a different item that only cost $7. After these expenses, he received the same amount of $46.3 from his friend and $12.9 from his grandmother as in the previous situation. How much money does he have in his wallet in this scenario?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After buying the item, John has $35.6 - $7 = $<<35.6-7=28.6>>28.6 left. After receiving money from his friend, John has $28.6 + $46.3 = $<<28.6+46.3=74.9>>74.9 in his wallet. Finally, after his grandmother gives him more money, John has $74.9 + $12.9 = $<<74.9+12.9=87.8>>87.8 in his wallet. ### Answer: $87.8
Expected answer: 87.8000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A car travels a total distance of 436.23179999999996 miles, and it used up 46.26 gallons of gas for the entire trip. What was the car's average mileage per gallon of gas used?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To get the car's mileage, divide the total distance traveled by the total gallons of gas used. The car's mileage is 436.23179999999996 miles / 46.26 gallons = <<436.23179999999996/46.26=9.43>>9.43 miles per gallon. ### Answer: 9.43 miles per gallon
Expected answer: 9.43000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous problem about the car's mileage, if the car originally travelled a total of 436.23179999999996 miles with 17 gallons of gas instead of 46.26, what would have been the car's average mileage per gallon of gas used?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To get the car's mileage, divide the total distance traveled by the total gallons of gas used. The car's mileage is 436.23179999999996 miles / 17 gallons = <<436.23179999999996/17=25.66069411764706>>25.66069411764706 miles per gallon. ### Answer: 25.66069411764706 miles per gallon
Expected answer: 25.6606941176471
Correct? No
Problem: Peter has $41.21 saved from his birthday and just received an additional $28.27 from mowing lawns. How much money does he have in total now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount, we need to add the amount Peter saved to the amount he earned: $41.21 + $28.27 = $69.48 ### Answer: $69.48
Expected answer: 69.4800000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sammy runs at a speed of 6.4 mph. If he runs for 43 hours in total, how far does he travel?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Sammy's distance is equal to his speed multiplied by the time he runs for. Therefore, he travels 6.4 x 43 = <<6.4*43=275.2>>275.2 miles. ### Answer: 275.2 miles
Expected answer: 275.200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After running for 43 hours at a speed of 6.4 mph, Sammy finds that his GPS unit was not fully calibrated and may overstate his distance by about 10 miles. What would be the revised distance he traveled according to the GPS?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Sammy's GPS indicated he ran 275.2 miles, but it may be off by 10 miles. Therefore, the revised distance according to the GPS would be 275.2 - 10 = <<275.2-10=265.2>>265.2 miles. ### Answer: 265.2 miles
Expected answer: 265.200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If Sammy had only run for 2 hours instead of 43 at a speed of 6.4 mph, how far would he have travelled?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: If Sammy only runs for 2 hours, his distance is calculated by 6.4 x 2 = <<6.4*2=12.8>>12.8 miles. ### Answer: 12.8 miles
Expected answer: 12.8000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has 50 dollars. He spent 24 dollars on a video game. How much money does John have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John has 50-24 = <<50-24=26>>26 dollars left. ### Answer: 26 dollars.
Expected answer: 26
Correct? Yes
Problem: If John initially had only 27 dollars instead of 50 dollars, and he still spent 24 dollars on a video game, how much money would he have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John would have 27 - 24 = <<27-24=3>>3 dollars left. ### Answer: 3 dollars.
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: David earns $46.37 an hour. His friend Robert earns $19.96 an hour. For one shift of 14.28 hours, how much did they collectively earn if they worked the same amount of hours?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: David earned $46.37 * 14.28 = $<<46.37*14.28=662.0936>>662.09 for the shift. Robert earned $19.96 * 14.28 = $<<19.96*14.28=284.9728>>284.97 for the shift. Together they earned $662.09 + $284.97 = $<<662.09+284.97=947.06>>947.06 ### Answer: $947.06
Expected answer: 947.192400000000
Correct? No
Problem: John has $6.3 in his piggy bank, and he finds a $39 bill on the street. How much money does he have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After finding the money, John has $6.3 + $39 = <<6.3+39=45.3>>$45.3. ### Answer: $45.3
Expected answer: 45.3000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John's twin brother Jacob, who also had $6.3 in his piggy bank and found a $39 bill on the street, decided to combine his money with John's. How much money do they have together now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Jacob also has $45.3, so together they have $45.3+$45.3 = <<45.3+45.3=90.6>>$90.6. ### Answer: $90.6
Expected answer: 90.6000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has $13 in his wallet. He then adds $33.88 more. How much money does John have in total now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John's total amount of money is equal to the sum of his original amount and the amount he added. This is represented by $13 + $33.88 = $46.88 ### Answer: $46.88
Expected answer: 46.8800000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Roger had $47 in his wallet. After lunch, he only had $28.5 left. How much money did he spend on lunch?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Roger spent $47 - $28.5 = <<47-28.5=18.5>>$18.5 on lunch. ### Answer: $18.5
Expected answer: 18.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Roger decided to convert the amount of money he spent on lunch to another currency where the exchange rate is $2.47 per dollar. How much would his lunch cost in this new currency?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Roger's lunch cost $18.5, and in the new currency, each dollar is worth $2.47, so his lunch would cost $18.5 * $2.47 = <<18.5*2.47=45.695>>$45.695 in the new currency. ### Answer: $45.695
Expected answer: 45.6950000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Roger initially thought he had $45 in his wallet, not $47. Given this, how much money did he actually spend on lunch?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: This question is asking how much money Roger spent on lunch, regardless of how much money he thought he had. We already calculated that he spent $18.50 on lunch. ### Answer: $18.50
Expected answer: 16.5000000000000
Correct? No
Problem: Jack has $29 already, and then his grandma gives him another $10.28 for his birthday. How much money does Jack have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Jack's total amount of money is $29 + $10.28 = $<<29+10.28=39.28>>39.28 ### Answer: $39.28
Expected answer: 39.2800000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose instead of giving Jack $30 on his birthday instead of $10.28. Now, how much money does Jack have before he goes to the toy store?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Jack's total amount of money is $29 + $30 = $<<29+30=59>>59 ### Answer: $59
Expected answer: 59
Correct? Yes
Problem: John had $18.4 in his wallet, but he spent $3.73 on a candy bar. Later that day, his mom gave him $33.4. After that, he spent $28 on a new video game. How much money does he have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: * After buying the candy bar, John had $18.4 - $3.73 = $<<18.4-3.73=14.67>>14.67. * After receiving money from his mom, he had $14.67 + $33.4 = $<<14.67+33.4=48.07>>48.07. * After buying the video game, he has $48.07 - $28 = $<<48.07-28=20.07>>20.07 left. ### Answer: $20.07
Expected answer: 20.0700000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John originally had $18.4 in his wallet, but instead of spending $3.73 on a candy bar, what if he spent $9? Then his mom gave him $33.4 and he later spent $28 on a new video game. How much money does he have left now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: * After buying the candy bar, John had $18.4 - $9 = $<<18.4-9=9.4>>9.40. * After receiving money from his mom, he had $9.40 + $33.4 = $<<9.4+33.4=42.8>>42.80. * After buying the video game, he has $42.80 - $28 = $<<42.8-28=14.8>>14.80 left. ### Answer: $14.80
Expected answer: 14.8000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Joseph paid $721.11 for 39 movie tickets. How much does each movie ticket cost?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Each movie ticket costs $721.11 / 39 = $<<721.11/39=18.5>>18.5. ### Answer: $18.5
Expected answer: 18.4900000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous problem, Joseph also bought a VIP experience for each movie ticket, which adds $14.3 to the cost of each ticket. How much does each movie ticket now cost, including the VIP experience?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Each movie ticket now costs $18.5 + $14.3 = $<<18.5+14.3 = 32.8>>32.8 ### Answer: $32.8
Expected answer: 32.7900000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous problem, if Joseph had actually paid $721.11 for only 6 movie tickets, what would be the cost of each ticket then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Each movie ticket would then cost $721.11 / 6 = $<<721.11/6=120.185>>120.19 rounded to the nearest cent. ### Answer: $120.19
Expected answer: 120.185000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A customer went shopping and spent $11.01 on each of the 34.2 pounds of fruits he bought. He also spent an extra $7 on snacks. How much total money did he spend?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: He spent 34.2 * 11.01 = $<<34.2*11.01=376.54>>376.54 on fruits. Therefore, he spent a total of 376.54 + 7 = $<<376.54+7=383.54>>383.54 ### Answer: $383.54
Expected answer: 383.542000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After spending money on fruits and snacks, the customer also bought a kitchen appliance that cost him $35.31. How much total money did he spend on all the items?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We know from the previous problem that he spent $383.54 on fruits and snacks. Adding the cost of the kitchen appliance, he spent a total of $383.54 + $35.31 = $<<383.54+35.31=418.85>>418.85 ### Answer: $418.85
Expected answer: 418.852000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous shopping scenario, if instead of buying 34.2 pounds of fruits, the customer bought 47 pounds of fruits while keeping the price per pound and the cost of snacks the same, how much total money would he have spent then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: He would spend 47 * 11.01 = $<<47*11.01=517.47>>517.47 on fruits. Therefore, he would spend a total of 517.47 + 7 = $<<517.47+7=524.47>>524.47 ### Answer: $524.47
Expected answer: 524.470000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A car travels at a constant speed of 48 km per hour. How far will the car have travelled after 3.6 hours?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The car travels 48 km in one hour. To find the distance travelled in 3.6 hours, we multiply the speed by the time: 48 km/hour * 3.6 hours = <<48*3.6=172.8>>172.8 km ### Answer: 172.8 km
Expected answer: 172.800000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous scenario, after traveling for 3.6 hours, the car continues to travel for another 30.0 km. What is the total distance traveled by the car?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We know from the previous problem that the car travels 172.8 km in the first 3.6 hours. Adding the additional distance, the total distance traveled is 172.8 km + 30.0 km = <<172.8+30=202.8>>202.8 km. ### Answer: 202.8 km
Expected answer: 202.800000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following the previous scenario, suppose the car had traveled at a speed of 46 km per hour instead of 48 km. How far would the car have traveled after 3.6 hours?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Similar to the previous problem, we multiply the new speed by the time to find the distance: 46 km/hour * 3.6 hours = <<46*3.6 = 165.6>>165.6 km. ### Answer: 165.6 km
Expected answer: 165.600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A cyclist pedals for 50.0 kilometers and then takes a break, having covered 38.4 kilometers before stopping. How far did the cyclist pedal after resuming from the break?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The cyclist pedaled 50.0 - 38.4 = <<50.0-38.4=11.6>>11.6 kilometers after resuming from the break. ### Answer: 11.6 kilometers
Expected answer: 11.6000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Based on the previous problem where a cyclist pedaled a certain distance after a break, assume now the cyclist repeats the same cycle for 7 days. How much distance, in kilometers, does the cyclist cover after resuming from the break over these 7 days?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Over 7 days, the cyclist covers 11.6 * 7 = <<11.6*7=81.2>>81.2 kilometers after resuming from the break each day. ### Answer: 81.2 kilometers
Expected answer: 81.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Based on the previous problem, now assume that on each of these 7 days, the cyclist pedals for 50.0 kilometers total, but now takes a break after covering 40 kilometers. How much distance, in kilometers, does the cyclist cover after resuming from the break each day?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Each day, the cyclist pedals 50.0 - 40 = <<50.0-40=10.0>>10.0 kilometers after resuming from the break. ### Answer: 10.0 kilometers
Expected answer: 10.0000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A delivery driver travels 67.66 miles in 17 hours. How far does he drive in one hour?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the distance traveled in one hour, divide the total distance by the total time: 67.66 miles / 17 hours = <<67.66/17=3.98>>3.98 miles per hour. ### Answer: 3.98 miles
Expected answer: 3.98000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: The delivery driver now realizes that his shift was 18 hours long, not 17 hours, for the 67.66-mile long journey. How far does he now calculate his average distance driven per hour?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We can find the new average speed by dividing the total distance by the corrected time: 67.66 miles / 18 hours = <<67.66/18 = 3.76>>3.76 miles per hour. ### Answer: 3.76 miles per hour
Expected answer: 3.75888888888889
Correct? Yes
Problem: Maria has $19 saved up. She later receives $43 from her birthday. How much money will she have left after buying a book that costs $40?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After her birthday, Maria has a total of $19 + $43 = <<19+43=62>>$62. After buying the book, she will have $62 - $40 = <<62-40=22>>$22 left. ### Answer: $22
Expected answer: 22
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose initially Maria had saved up $19. Then, instead of receiving $43 from her birthday, she only received $28. After buying the same book that costs $40, how much money will she have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After her birthday, Maria has a total of $19 + $28 = <<19+28=47>>$47. After buying the book, she will have $47 - $40 = <<47-40=7>>$7 left. ### Answer: $7
Expected answer: 7
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mia has $41 saved from her birthday. She babysat for a neighbour and earned an additional $24.7. How much money does she have now in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount, we need to add Mia's savings to her babysitting earnings: $41 + $24.7 = $<<41+24.7=65.70>>65.70. ### Answer: $65.70
Expected answer: 65.7000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mia has $41 saved from her birthday. She babysat for a neighbour and earned an additional $24.7. After gathering her savings, she decided to buy a new book that cost $38.6. How much money does she have left after buying the book?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First find Mia's total savings after babysitting: $41 + $24.7 = $<<41+24.7=65.70>>65.70 Then subtract the cost of the book to find her remaining money: $65.70 - $38.6 = $<<65.70-38.6=27.10>>27.10 ### Answer: $27.10
Expected answer: 27.1000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of $41 from her birthday, suppose Mia had only managed to save $35. Including her earnings of $24.7 from babysitting, how much money does she now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add her savings to her babysitting earnings: $35 + $24.7 = $<<35+24.7=59.70>>59.70 ### Answer: $59.70
Expected answer: 59.7000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John spent 12 dollars on lunch and an additional 5 dollars on a dessert. After lunch, he went to a clothing store and bought a shirt for $26.00. How much total money did John spend?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: * John spent 12 + 5 = <<12+5=17>>17 dollars on lunch and dessert. * In total, he spent 17 + 26 = <<17+26=43>> dollars. ### Answer: $43.00
Expected answer: 43.0000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In addition to his other expenses, John decided to buy twenty raffle tickets for a charity event. Each ticket cost the same as the total amount of money he had spent earlier. How much money did John spend on the raffle tickets?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: * John had spent $43.00 prior to buying raffle tickets. * Each of the 20 raffle tickets cost $43.00. * He spent 20 * $43.00 = <<20*43=860>>$860.00 on raffle tickets. ### Answer: $860.00
Expected answer: 860.000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John spent 12 dollars on lunch and an additional 5 dollars on a dessert. After lunch, he went to a clothing store and was contemplating buying a shirt. However, instead of the $26.00 shirt he bought previously, he decided to buy a more expensive shirt that costs $49. What would be the total amount of money spent in this scenario?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: * John spent 12 + 5 = <<12+5=17>>17 dollars on lunch and dessert. * If he buys the $49 shirt, he will spend 17 + 49 = <<17+49=66>> dollars in total. ### Answer: $66
Expected answer: 66
Correct? Yes
Problem: Laura deposited $23 into her bank account on Monday. On Tuesday, she deposited an additional $44.5. How much money did Laura deposit in total over those two days?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount of money Laura deposited, we need to add the amount she deposited on Monday to the amount she deposited on Tuesday: $23 + $44.5 = $67.5 ### Answer: $67.50
Expected answer: 67.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After depositing a total of $23 + $44.5 over two days, Laura decided to take out $9 for lunch. How much money does she have left in her account now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Laura deposited a total of $23 + $44.5 = $67.5. After taking out $9 for lunch, she has $67.5 - $9 = $58.5 left in her account. ### Answer: $58.50
Expected answer: 58.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Consider that initially, instead of depositing $23, Laura had only deposited $4 to her bank account on Monday, but still went ahead to deposit an additional $44.5 on Tuesday. How much money did she deposit in total over those two days?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount deposited, we add the initial deposit to the Tuesday deposit: $4 + $44.5 = $48.5 ### Answer: $48.50
Expected answer: 48.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Peter has 11 dimes in his pocket. If each dime is worth $1, how much money does Peter have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Peter has a total of 11 * $1 = $<<11*1=11>>11. ### Answer: $11
Expected answer: 11
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of having 11 dimes in his pocket, Peter actually has 11 dozen dimes. If each dime is worth $1, how much money does Peter now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: A dozen has 12 items, so Peter has 11 * 12 = <<11*12=132>>132 dimes. That means he has a total of 132 * $1 = $<<132*1=132>>132. ### Answer: $132
Expected answer: 132
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has saved $43.36 each week for 13 weeks. How much money has he saved in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount of money John saved, we multiply the amount saved each week by the number of weeks he saved. That means he saved $43.36 x 13 = $<<43.36*13=563.68>>563.68 in total. ### Answer: $563.68
Expected answer: 563.680000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After saving $43.36 each week for 13 weeks, John received a surprise gift of $9.6 from his grandmother. How much money does he have in total now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We know John saved a total of $563.68 from the previous problem. Adding his grandmother's gift of $9.60, he now has $563.68 + $9.60 = $<<563.68+9.6=573.28>>573.28 ### Answer: $573.28
Expected answer: 573.280000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Instead of saving $43.36 each week, suppose John has been saving only $23 each week for the same duration of 13 weeks. How much money would he have saved by the end of this period?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount saved, we multiply his weekly savings by the number of weeks. So, John would have saved $23/week * 13 weeks = $<<23*13=299>>299. ### Answer: $299
Expected answer: 299
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jenna has 29 quarters in her piggy bank. If each quarter is worth 3.0 dimes, what is the total amount of money Jenna has in her piggy bank in terms of dimes?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Jenna has a total of 29 x 3 = <<29*3=87>>87 dimes in her piggy bank. ### Answer: 87
Expected answer: 87.0000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Peter divided his $85 among 5 of his friends. How much money did each friend receive?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Each friend received $85/5 = <<85/5=17>>$17. ### Answer: $17
Expected answer: 17
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mandy has saved up $29.7 from her part-time job. Her father gave her an additional $12.6. How much money does she have in total now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to sum up the amount Mandy saved and the amount her father gave her, which is $29.7 + $12.6 = $<<29.7+12.6=42.3>>42.3 ### Answer: $42.3
Expected answer: 42.3000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mandy decided to buy a book that cost $19.79. How much money does she have left after buying the book?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find out how much money Mandy has left, we need to subtract the cost of the book from the total amount she had, which is $42.3 - $19.79 = $<<42.3-19.79=22.51>>22.51 ### Answer: $22.51
Expected answer: 22.5100000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mandy's father decided to be more generous and instead gave her $31. How much money would she have in total then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to sum up the amount Mandy saved and the new amount her father gave her, which is $29.7 + $31 = $<<29.7+31=60.7>>60.7 ### Answer: $60.7
Expected answer: 60.7000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has 46 dollars in his savings account. His grandmother gave him 6.57 dollars for completing some chores around her house. How much money does John have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount of money John has, we need to add the money his grandmother gave him to his existing savings: $46 + $6.57 = $52.57 ### Answer: $52.57
Expected answer: 52.5700000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John used 38 dollars out of his total savings to purchase a new video game. How much money does John now have left in his savings?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: John had $52.57 and spent $38 on a video game, so we subtract the cost of the game from his total savings: $52.57 - $38 = $14.57 ### Answer: $14.57
Expected answer: 14.5700000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If a bakery makes 10 loaves of bread every hour and the oven is working continuously for 36 hours, how many loaves of bread are made?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The bakery produces 10 loaves/hour * 36 hours = <<10*36=360>>360 loaves of bread. ### Answer: 360
Expected answer: 360
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous situation, where the bakery made 10 loaves of bread every hour for continuous 36 hours, if they decided to donate 45 loaves to a local food bank, how many loaves of bread would they have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We know from before that the bakery made 360 loaves of bread. After donating 45 loaves, they would have 360 - 45 = <<360-45=315>>315 loaves left. ### Answer: 315
Expected answer: 315
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the earlier situation, where the bakery made loaves of bread continuously for 36 hours and each hour they created 10 loaves, what if they improved their efficiency such that they now made 21 loaves every hour? How many loaves of bread would they produce in 36 hours with this increased efficiency?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: With the improved efficiency, the bakery would produce 21 loaves/hour * 36 hours = <<21*36=756>>756 loaves of bread. ### Answer: 756
Expected answer: 756
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has saved up $30.02 in his piggy bank. His grandmother gave him $38.9 for his birthday. How much money does he have now in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount John has, we need to add the amount in his piggy bank to the amount his grandmother gave him: $30.02 + $38.9 ### Answer: $68.92
Expected answer: 68.9200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John has saved up $30.02 in his piggy bank. His grandmother gave him $38.9 for his birthday, so now he has a certain amount of money. If he manages to save up six times the amount he has now, how much money will he have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First find the total John has now: $30.02 + $38.9 = $68.92 Then multiply that amount by 6 to find out how much he'll have if he saves six times that amount: $68.92 * 6 = $413.52 ### Answer: $413.52
Expected answer: 413.520000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John originally had $30.02 saved up in his piggy bank, but instead of his grandmother giving him $38.9 for his birthday, she gave him $13. How much money does John have now in his piggy bank?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total amount John has now, we need to add the amount his grandmother gave him to his original savings: $30.02 + $13.00 = $43.02 ### Answer: $43.02
Expected answer: 43.0200000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: You already finished a 23.0-kilometer route. If you continue for another 17.2 kilometers, what will be your total travel distance?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You need to add the distance you have already traveled to the distance you will travel to find the total distance. This means your total travel distance will be 23.0 + 17.2 = <<23.0+17.2=40.2>>40.2 kilometers. ### Answer: 40.2 kilometers.
Expected answer: 40.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: You already finished a 23.0-kilometer route. If you continue for another 17.2 kilometers, what will be your total travel distance? Afterward, if you have a 48.2-kilometer course to finish, how many more kilometers do you need to travel to complete the course?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You need to add the distance you have already traveled to the distance you will travel to find the total distance. This means your total travel distance will be 23.0 + 17.2 = <<23.0+17.2=40.2>>40.2 kilometers. You need to subtract the total distance you will travel after the next leg from the total course distance to find the remaining kilometers. This means you need to travel 48.2-40.2 = <<48.2-40.2 = 8>>8 more kilometers. ### Answer: 8 kilometers.
Expected answer: 8.00000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: You already finished a 23.0-kilometer route. What if instead you had a longer route that was 48 kilometers before added to your already traveled distance of 23 kilometers, what would your total travel distance have been in that scenario?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You need to add the distance you have already traveled to the longer route distance to find the total distance. This means your total travel distance would have been 23 + 48 = <<23+48=71>>71 kilometers. ### Answer: 71 kilometers.
Expected answer: 71.0000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Bob is driving a car at a speed of 8.0 miles per hour. If he drives for 3.9 hours, how many miles will he have driven?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total distance, we multiply the speed by the time: 8.0 miles/hour * 3.9 hours = 31.2 miles. ### Answer: 31.2 miles.
Expected answer: 31.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Bob is driving a car at a speed of 8.0 miles per hour. If he drives for 3.9 hours, he will have driven a certain number of miles. After driving for a while, he stops for a break, during which his car cools down by 21 miles of equivalent energy consumption. What's the equivalent distance for the energy remaining in his car?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First, find the total distance Bob drives: 8.0 miles/hour * 3.9 hours = 31.2 miles. Then, subtract the equivalent distance for the cooled-down energy: 31.2 miles - 21 miles = 10.2 miles. ### Answer: 10.2 miles.
Expected answer: 10.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Initially, Bob was driving a car at a speed of 8.0 miles per hour for 3.9 hours. Now, consider that instead of driving for 3.9 hours, he drove for 26 hours. How many miles would he have driven then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total distance, we multiply his speed by the new time: 8.0 miles/hour * 26 hours = 208 miles. ### Answer: 208 miles.
Expected answer: 208.000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A train travels at a speed of 47.1 miles per hour. How far will it travel in 8 hours?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total distance, we multiply the train's speed by the time it travels. So, the train will travel 47.1 miles/hour * 8 hours = <<47.1*8=376.8>>376.8 miles. ### Answer: 376.8 miles
Expected answer: 376.800000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After the train has travelled for 8 hours at a speed of 47.1 miles per hour, it suddenly has to take a detour that reduces the total distance travelled by 21.2 miles. What is the final distance travelled by the train?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We already know from the previous problem that the train travels 376.8 miles in 8 hours. Since the detour reduces the total distance by 21.2 miles, we subtract that amount: 376.8 miles - 21.2 miles = <<376.8-21.2=355.6>>355.6 miles. ### Answer: 355.6 miles
Expected answer: 355.600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if the train had to travel for 16 hours instead of 8 at the same speed of 47.1 miles per hour? How far would it travel then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Over 16 hours, the train would travel twice as far as it did in 8 hours. We can calculate this by multiplying the speed by the time: 47.1 miles/hour * 16 hours = <<47.1*16=753.6>>753.6 miles. ### Answer: 753.6 miles
Expected answer: 753.600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In a certain online video game, you start with 18 health points. An enemy hits you and you lose 3.4 health points. For every remaining health point, your character's strength level increases by a 46 points multiplier. How many strength levels will your character have after the enemy hit?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After getting hit, you have 18 - 3.4 = <<18-3.4=14.6>>14.6 health points remaining. This means your character's strength level will increase by 14.6 x 46 = <<14.6*46=671.6>>671.6 levels. Since you can't have a fraction of a level, we round down to the nearest whole number. ### Answer: 671
Expected answer: 671.600000000000
Correct? No
Problem: John had $29.33 in his wallet. After spending $7.3 out of $37 he had in his bank account, he decided to put the remaining money from his bank account into his wallet. How much money did he have in his wallet then?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After spending money, John had $37 - $7.3 = <<37-7.3=29.7>>$29.7 left in his bank account. After putting the remaining money from his account into his wallet, John had $29.33 + $29.7 = <<29.33+29.7=59.03>>$59.03 in his wallet. ### Answer: $59.03
Expected answer: 59.0300000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: John saw a sale on his favorite books and decided to buy 8 books using the money he had in his wallet. If each book cost the amount equal to the money he had in his wallet, how much did he spend on books?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We do not know how much money John had in his wallet at this time, so we cannot answer the question. ### Answer: Unknown
Expected answer: 472.240000000000
Correct? No
Problem: John initially thought he had $29.33 in his wallet, but it turns out he only had $5. After spending $7.3 out of his $37 bank balance, he again added the remaining money from his bank account to his wallet. Now, how much money does he have in his wallet?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After spending $7.3, John had $37 - $7.3 = <<37-7.3=29.7>>$29.7 remaining in his bank account. After adding the remaining balance to his wallet, John has $5 + $29.7 = <<5+29.7=34.7>>$34.7 in his wallet. ### Answer: $34.7
Expected answer: 34.7000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jenny had $48.6 in her savings account. On her birthday, she received $26 more. After a few days, she spent $22 on a new book. How much money does Jenny have now in her savings account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After her birthday, Jenny had $48.6 + $26 = <<48.6+26=74.6>>$74.6 in her savings account. After buying the book, Jenny has $74.6 - $22 = <<74.6-22=52.6>>$52.6 left in her savings account. ### Answer: $52.6
Expected answer: 52.6000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jenny later decided to purchase a video game for $42 from her savings account. How much money does she have left in her account after buying the video game?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After buying the video game, Jenny has $52.6 - $42 = <<52.6-42=10.6>>$10.6 left in her account. ### Answer: $10.6
Expected answer: 10.6000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: What if on Jenny's birthday she received $27 instead of $26 and then she still spent $22 on a new book. How much money does she have now in her savings account in that case?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After her birthday, Jenny had $48.6 + $27 = <<48.6+27=75.6>>$75.6 in her savings account. After buying the book, Jenny has $75.6 - $22 = <<75.6-22=53.6>>$53.6 left in her savings account. ### Answer: $53.6
Expected answer: 53.6000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A car travels 46.72 miles per hour. After 11.62 hours of driving, the car's gas tank indicates that an additional 41 miles can be covered before the gas runs out. How many miles can the car still travel in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The car has already traveled 46.72*11.62 = <<46.72*11.62=543.2064>>543.21 miles. So, the car can travel a total of 543.21+41 = <<543.21+41=584.21>>584.21 miles. ### Answer: 584.21 miles
Expected answer: 583.886400000000
Correct? No
Problem: Jerry has $23.7 in his bank account and his mom gives him an additional $7.56. After buying a snack for $4.5, how much money does Jerry have left in his account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After his mom gave him money, Jerry has $23.7 + $7.56 = <<23.7+7.56=31.26>>$31.26 in his account. After buying the snack, Jerry has $31.26 - $4.5 = <<31.26-4.5=26.76>>$26.76 left in his account. ### Answer: $26.76
Expected answer: 26.7600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Using the money left in Jerry's bank account after buying a snack, he decides to buy a book. If the book costs $36, how much more money does he need to buy the book?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Jerry needs $36 - $26.76 = <<36-26.76=9.24>>$9.24 more to buy the book. ### Answer: $9.24
Expected answer: 9.24000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous situation, suppose Jerry had initially $19 in his bank account instead of $23.7. After his mom gives him $7.56 and he buys a snack for $4.5, how much money does he have left in his bank account now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After his mom gave him money, Jerry has $19 + $7.56 = <<19+7.56=26.56>>$26.56 in his account. After buying the snack, Jerry has $26.56 - $4.5 = <<26.56-4.5=22.06>>$22.06 left in his account. ### Answer: $22.06
Expected answer: 22.0600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: You found 3 rare coins at your grandmother's house. Each coin can be sold for 10 dollars. After selling them, you pay 5.1 dollars for auction fees. How much money do you have left after paying the auction fees?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You earn 3*10 = <<3*10=30>>30 dollars from selling the coins. After paying the auction fees, you have 30-5.1 = <<30-5.1=24.9>>24.9 dollars left. ### Answer: 24.9 dollars
Expected answer: 24.9000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous scenario, you discovered that you'd actually found 25 of these rare coins in your grandmother's house, not just 3. Each coin can still be sold for 10 dollars and the auction fees remain at 5.1 dollars. How much money will you have left after paying the auction fees?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: You earn 25 * $10 = <<25*10=250>>$250 from selling the coins. After paying the auction fees, you have $250 - $5.1 = <<250-5.1=244.9>>$244.9 left. ### Answer: $244.9
Expected answer: 244.900000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Maria saved $20 last week. This week, she saved an additional $22.88. How much money has Maria saved in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the amount of money Maria saved last week to the amount she saved this week: $20 + $22.88 = $42.88 ### Answer: $42.88
Expected answer: 42.8800000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous problem, Maria saved $20 last week. Instead of saving an additional $22.88 this week, she was only able to save $17. Now, how much money has Maria saved in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the amount Maria saved last week to the amount she saved this week: $20 + $17 = $37 ### Answer: $37
Expected answer: 37
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jake has stopped into a boutique where shirts are priced at $33 each. He buys 2.4 times this amount in clothing. How much did he spend?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to multiply the price of each shirt by 2.4 to find the total amount Jake spent: $33 * 2.4 = $<<33*2.4=79.20>>79.20 ### Answer: $79.20
Expected answer: 79.2000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jake has stopped into a boutique where shirts are priced at $33 each. He buys 2.4 times this amount in clothing. Adding to that, Jake also found a hat he liked for $19.53. How much did he spend in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First, we need to multiply the price of each shirt by 2.4 to find the total amount Jake spent on shirts: $33 * 2.4 = $<<33*2.4=79.20>>79.20. Then we need to add the price of the hat to find the total amount Jake spent: $79.20 + $19.53 = $<<79.20+19.53=98.73>>98.73. ### Answer: $98.73
Expected answer: 98.7300000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: In the previous scenario, Jake bought 2.4 times the amount of clothing priced at $33 each. This time, however, the shirts are priced at $45 each. If Jake still buys 2.4 times this amount in clothing, how much will he spend now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to multiply the new price per shirt by 2.4 to find the total amount Jake spent: $45 * 2.4 = $<<45*2.4=108>>108 ### Answer: $108
Expected answer: 108.000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sarah has $36.4 in her savings account. She earns $19.0 by helping her neighbor with gardening. After adding this money to her account, she receives a surprise gift of $25 from her grandmother. How much money does she have now?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After the gardening earnings, Sarah has $36.4 + $19.0 = <<36.4+19=55.4>>$55.4 in her account. After receiving the gift, Sarah has $55.4 + $25 = <<55.4+25=80.4>>$80.4 in her account. ### Answer: $80.4
Expected answer: 80.4000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Suppose Sarah initially had $36.4 instead of $19.0 in her savings account. After her neighbor gave her an additional $19.0 for her help in the garden, and her grandmother gifted her $36, how much money does she now have in her account?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: After the neighbor's payment, Sarah has $36.4 + $19.0 = <<36.4+19=55.4>>$55.4 in her account. After her grandmother's gift, Sarah has $55.4 + $36 = <<55.4+36=91.4>>$91.4 in her account. ### Answer: $91.4
Expected answer: 91.4000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jenny has saved $18 in her piggy bank and found another $40.44 under her bed. She also earned $48 from selling lemonade during summer. How much money does Jenny have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: In total, Jenny has $18 + $40.44 + $48 = $106.44 ### Answer: $106.44
Expected answer: 106.440000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Jenny realized that she actually found $49 under her bed instead of $40.44. Keeping in mind that she still has saved $18 in her piggy bank and earned $48 from selling lemonade during summer, how much money does Jenny now have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: In total, Jenny has $18 + $49 + $48 = $115 ### Answer: $115
Expected answer: 115
Correct? Yes
Problem: Sarah has earned $38 per day over her first job. After several months, she managed to save up $24.71 for every $1 she earned. Additionally, she has $11.6 in her piggy bank from before she started working. How much money does she have in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: Sarah's savings from work amount to $24.71/$1 * $38 = <<24.71/1*38=928.98>>$928.98. Therefore, Sarah has a total of $928.98 + $11.6 = <<928.98+11.6=940.58>>$940.58. ### Answer: $940.58
Expected answer: 950.580000000000
Correct? No
Problem: A car travels at a constant speed of 41.8 miles per hour for 23 hours. How many miles did the car travel?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the total distance traveled, we multiply the speed by the time. Therefore, the car traveled 41.8 * 23 = <<41.8*23=961.4>>961.4 miles. ### Answer: 961.4 miles
Expected answer: 961.400000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If the car was only traveling for 12 hours instead of 23 hours, at the same speed of 41.8 miles per hour, how many miles would the car travel?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We use the same approach as before, multiplying the speed by the new time. The car would travel 41.8 miles/hour * 12 hours = <<41.8*12 = 501.6>>501.6 miles. ### Answer: 501.6 miles
Expected answer: 501.600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: A farmer has a cow that produces 35.7 liters of milk every day. How much milk does the cow produce in 28 days?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The cow produces 35.7 * 28 = <<35.7*28=999.6>>999.6 liters of milk in 28 days. ### Answer: 999.6 liters
Expected answer: 999.600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: After producing milk for 28 days, the farmer sells 20 liters to a local cheese producer. How much milk does he have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The farmer has 999.6 - 20 = <<999.6-20=979.6>>979.6 liters of milk left. ### Answer: 979.6 liters
Expected answer: 979.600000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If the cow produced 19 liters of milk a day, instead of 35.7, how much would the cow produce in 28 days?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: The cow would produce 19 * 28 = <<19*28=532>>532 liters of milk in 28 days. ### Answer: 532 liters
Expected answer: 532
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mason had saved up $34 from his previous week's allowance. This week, he earned an extra $31.4 by doing some extra house chores. How much money does Mason have now in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the amount of money Mason saved from his previous allowance and the amount he earned doing extra chores, so the equation is $34 + $31.4 = $<<34+31.4=65.4>>65.4 ### Answer: $65.4
Expected answer: 65.4000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Mason had saved up $34 from his previous week's allowance. This week, he earned an extra $31.4 by doing some extra house chores. After counting this, his grandma gave him another $27.4 as a gift. How much money does Mason have now in total?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: First we add Mason's savings and his earnings: $34 + $31.4 = $<<34+31.4=65.4>>65.4. Then we add his grandma's gift to that amount: $65.4 + $27.4 = $<<65.4+27.4=92.8>>92.8 ### Answer: $92.8
Expected answer: 92.8000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Rachel had 48 dollars. She spent 5.5 dollars on a new toy. How much money does Rachel have left?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to subtract the price of the toy from Rachel's initial amount of money. This will give us: 48 - 5.5 = 42.5 ### Answer: $42.50
Expected answer: 42.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: Following her purchase, Rachel's mom gave her an additional 23 dollars. How much money does Rachel now have?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We need to add the money Rachel's mom gave her to the amount she had left after buying the toy, $42.50. This totals: $42.50 + $23 = $65.50. ### Answer: $65.50
Expected answer: 65.5000000000000
Correct? Yes
Problem: If the toy that Rachel bought originally cost 45 dollars instead of 5.5 dollars, how much money would Rachel have left after her purchase?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: We still need to subtract the price of the toy from Rachel's initial amount of money. This will give us: 48 - 45 = 3 ### Answer: $3.00
Expected answer: 3
Correct? Yes
Problem: A cyclist travels 506 kilometers in 11 days. How many kilometers does the cyclist travel each day?
Gemini-1.5 Pro:
Reasoning: To find the number of kilometers traveled each day, divide the total kilometers by the number of days: 506 kilometers / 11 days = 46 kilometers/day. ### Answer: 46 kilometers/day
Expected answer: 46
Correct? Yes