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Llama 3 8B on 5.OA.A.1

Common Core Standard 5.OA.A.1

This standard covers the following:

Use parentheses, brackets, or braces in numerical expressions, and evaluate expressions with these symbols.

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A sock company packages their socks in sets of 40. They have 2840 socks to package, and they currently have 93 packs already made. How many packs of socks will they have in total once all the socks have been packaged? Afterward, they received an another shipment of 70 packs of socks, but had to return 8 due to quality issues. How many packs of socks does the company have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The company has 2840 socks to package, and they currently have 93 packs already made. To find the number of packs needed, we divide the number of socks by the number of socks per pack: 2840/40 = 71. So, they need 71 more packs. Adding this to the 93 packs they already have, they will have a total of 93 + 71 = 164 packs.
After receiving another shipment of 70 packs, they will have a total of 164 + 70 = 234 packs. However, they had to return 8 packs due to quality issues, so they will have 234 - 8 = 226 packs.
### Answer: 226

Expected answer: 226

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A gardener has a field where he planted 80 rose bushes, with each bush producing 30 roses. Before he is able to gather them, a storm blows away 43 roses. How many roses are remaining in the field?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: First, let's calculate the total number of roses initially: 80 rose bushes x 30 roses/bush = 80 x 30 = 2400 roses.
Then, 43 roses are blown away, leaving us with: 2400 - 43 = 2357 roses.
### Answer: 2357

Expected answer: 2357

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: The gardener realizes afterwards that he initially miscounted the rose bushes in the field. It turns out there were not 80, but 84 rose bushes instead, each still producing 30 roses, and the storm still managed to blow away 43 roses. How many roses does he actually have remaining in the field after the correction?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: First, let's calculate the total number of roses initially: 84 rose bushes x 30 roses/bush = 84 x 30 = 2520 roses.
Then, 43 roses are blown away, leaving us with: 2520 - 43 = 2477 roses.
### Answer: 2477

Expected answer: 2477

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A dolphin can leap (3 + 59) feet high. If a dolphin completes 89 jumps in a day, how many feet in total has the dolphin jumped in that day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The dolphin can leap (3 + 59) = 62 feet high. Since it completes 89 jumps, the total height it jumped is 62 x 89 = 5522 feet.
### Answer: 5522

Expected answer: 5518

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A candy store starts the day with 81 pieces of candy. They receive a delivery adding another 6 candies, but they sell 61 throughout the day. How many pieces of candy does the store have left?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store starts with 81 pieces of candy.
They receive a delivery of 6 more candies, so they now have 81 + 6 = 87 pieces of candy.
They sell 61 candies, so they have 87 - 61 = 26 pieces of candy left.
### Answer: 26

Expected answer: 26

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the original scenario, suppose the candy store started the day with 81 pieces of candy and received a delivery adding 6, but this time, they only sold 7 candies throughout the day. How many pieces of candy does the store now have left?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store starts with 81 pieces of candy.
They receive a delivery of 6 more candies, so they now have 81 + 6 = 87 pieces of candy.
They sell 7 candies, so they have 87 - 7 = 80 pieces of candy left.
### Answer: 80

Expected answer: 80

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A sports store received a huge shipment of 6806 pairs of ice skates. If they evenly distribute the skates over 82 separate stores, how many pairs of ice skates does each store receive?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the number of pairs of ice skates each store receives, we need to divide the total number of pairs (6806) by the number of stores (82).

6806 รท 82 = 83

So, each store receives 83 pairs of ice skates.

### Answer: 83

Expected answer: 83

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: A sports store received a huge shipment of 6806 pairs of ice skates. After reconsideration, they decided to distribute the skates over 61 stores instead of the original 82. How many pairs of ice skates does each store receive now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since the total number of pairs remains the same (6806), we can divide it by the new number of stores (61) to find the number of pairs each store receives.

6806 รท 61 = 111.8

Since you can't divide ice skates into fractions, we round down to the nearest whole number.

111.8 โ†’ 111

So, each store receives 111 pairs of ice skates.

### Answer: 111

Expected answer: 6806/61

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: If a stationery store has 40 white erasers and 74 pink erasers, how many erasers are there in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store has 40 white erasers and 74 pink erasers. To find the total number of erasers, we add the number of white erasers to the number of pink erasers.

40 (white erasers) + 74 (pink erasers) = 114

### Answer: 114

Expected answer: 114

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead that the stationery store had 40 white erasers and 37 pink erasers initially. How many erasers would be there in total in that case?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store has 40 white erasers and 37 pink erasers. To find the total number of erasers, we add the number of white erasers to the number of pink erasers.

40 (white erasers) + 37 (pink erasers) = 77

### Answer: 77

Expected answer: 77

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A company manufactures a batch of pens, with each batch containing 39 pens. If the company has produced 10 such batches, how many pens does the company have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The company has produced 10 batches, and each batch contains 39 pens. To find the total number of pens, we multiply the number of batches by the number of pens in each batch: 10 x 39 = <<10 x 39=390>>.
### Answer: 390

Expected answer: 390

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: The company found an error in their manufacturing record and realized they actually produced 43 batches of pens, not 10. Each batch still contained 39 pens. How many pens did the company actually produce?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The company actually produced 43 batches, and each batch contains 39 pens. To find the total number of pens, we multiply the number of batches by the number of pens in each batch: 43 x 39 = <<43 x 39=1677>>.
### Answer: 1677

Expected answer: 1677

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A dairy farm has 33 cows. Each cow gives (99 + 58) litres of milk per day. How many litres of milk does the farm produce in a day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: First, we need to calculate the total amount of milk each cow gives per day. This is done by evaluating the expression inside the parentheses: 99 + 58 = 157.
Since each cow gives 157 litres of milk per day, and there are 33 cows, the total amount of milk produced by the farm in a day is 33 x 157 = 5103.
### Answer: 5103

Expected answer: 5181

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A farmer's grape vine produces 3344 grapes, and he has 38 equally productive grape vines. How many grapes does each vine produce?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total number of grapes produced by all the vines is 3344.
The number of grapes produced by each vine is the total number of grapes divided by the number of vines.
3344 รท 38 = <<3344/38=88>>88 grapes per vine.
### Answer: 88

Expected answer: 88

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the original scenario, a grape vine produces 3344 grapes and the farmer has 38 equally productive grape vines. Now consider a new situation. Let's say the farmer had 75 equally productive vines instead of 38. How many grapes would each vine have produced now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total number of grapes produced by all the vines is still 3344.
The number of grapes produced by each vine is the total number of grapes divided by the number of vines.
3344 รท 75 = <<3344/75=44.53>>44.53 grapes per vine.
### Answer: 44.53

Expected answer: 3344/75

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: Yesterday, a region experienced a heavy snowfall of 93 cm and today it received additional 29 cm of snow. However, 20 cm of snow has melted. How much snow is now left?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, the region received 93 cm of snow.
Then, it received an additional 29 cm of snow, making the total snowfall 93 + 29 = 122 cm.
However, 20 cm of snow has melted, leaving 122 - 20 = 102 cm of snow.
### Answer: 102

Expected answer: 102

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Considering the previous problem, suppose the region experienced a heavier snowfall of 90 cm (instead of 29 cm) today, while the 20 cm melt remained the same. How might this change the amount of snow now left?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, the region received 93 cm of snow.
Then, it received an additional 90 cm of snow, making the total snowfall 93 + 90 = 183 cm.
However, 20 cm of snow has melted, leaving 183 - 20 = 163 cm of snow.
### Answer: 163

Expected answer: 163

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A farmer has 3069 grapes. If he decides to put 33 grapes in each bag, he will have a certain number of bags. However, the farmer eats 13 bags of grapes and also gives away 50 bags of grapes. How many bags of grapes does the farmer have left?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farmer has 3069 grapes initially. He puts 33 grapes in each bag, so the number of bags he can make is 3069/33 = 92 bags.
He eats 13 bags, so he has 92 - 13 = 79 bags left.
He gives away 50 bags, so he has 79 - 50 = 29 bags left.
### Answer: 29

Expected answer: 30

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A giraffe's neck has a length of 275 centimeters. If one meter is made up of 5 centimeters, what is the length of the giraffe's neck in meters?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since one meter is made up of 5 centimeters, we can convert the length of the giraffe's neck from centimeters to meters by dividing the length in centimeters by 5.

Length in centimeters: 275 cm
Length in meters: 275 รท 5 = 55

### Answer: 55

Expected answer: 55

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After measuring the giraffe's neck in meters, the zookeeper re-evaluates and discovers that his conversion tool was using an incorrect scale, where one meter actually equals 43 centimeters, not 5 centimeters. Given this new information, what is the length of the giraffe's neck in meters?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since one meter actually equals 43 centimeters, we can convert the length of the giraffe's neck from centimeters to meters by dividing the length in centimeters by 43.

Length in centimeters: 275 cm
Length in meters: 275 รท 43 = 6.37

### Answer: 6.37

Expected answer: 275/43

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A furniture store had 79 chairs in stock. They received a shipment adding 9 more chairs, but then sold 45 chairs in a single day. How many chairs are now in the store?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store initially had 79 chairs.
They received a shipment of 9 more chairs, so the total number of chairs becomes 79 + 9 = 88.
Then, they sold 45 chairs, so the remaining number of chairs is 88 - 45 = 43.
### Answer: 43

Expected answer: 43

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following from the previous scenario, consider instead that the furniture store originally had 79 chairs, but this time, they only received a shipment adding 4 more chairs before selling 45 chairs in a single day. How many chairs are now in the store under this altered situation?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store initially had 79 chairs.
They received a shipment of 4 more chairs, so the total number of chairs becomes 79 + 4 = 83.
Then, they sold 45 chairs, so the remaining number of chairs is 83 - 45 = 38.
### Answer: 38

Expected answer: 38

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A teddy bear factory can usually produce 91 teddy bears per day. However, today their capacity increased by 1 due to new equipment. A charity has also just donated materials to produce 15 additional teddy bears. How many total teddy bears can the factory produce today?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory can usually produce 91 teddy bears per day. With the new equipment, the capacity increases by 1, so the new capacity is 91 + 1 = 92 teddy bears per day.
Additionally, the charity has donated materials to produce 15 more teddy bears, so the total number of teddy bears the factory can produce today is 92 + 15 = 107.
### Answer: 107

Expected answer: 107

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A giraffe needs 67 leaves to eat at breakfast and 33 more in the afternoon. How many leaves does the giraffe need for a single day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The giraffe needs 67 leaves for breakfast and 33 more leaves for the afternoon, which is a total of 67 + 33 = 100 leaves.
### Answer: 100

Expected answer: 100

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: If you can drive 304 miles on a tank of gas and the tank is divided into 4 equal parts, how many miles can you drive on one part of the tank?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since the tank is divided into 4 equal parts, each part is 304/4 = 76 miles.
### Answer: 76

Expected answer: 76

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: If you can drive 304 miles on a full tank of gas which is divided into 4 equal parts, you've found that you can drive a certain distance on one part of the tank. If you refill this part of the tank 47 times, how many miles in total could you potentially drive?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: As previously calculated, one part of the tank can drive 76 miles. If you refill this part 47 times, you can drive 76 x 47 = 3572 miles.
### Answer: 3572

Expected answer: 3572

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: If instead of a tank which can hold enough gas to drive 304 miles, you have a smaller tank which holds enough gas to drive 304 miles, and you divide the tank into 91 equal parts, how many miles can you drive on one part of the tank?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total distance the tank can drive is still 304 miles. Since the tank is divided into 91 equal parts, each part is 304/91 = 3.34 miles.
### Answer: 3.34

Expected answer: 304/91

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A shop sells ice skates at 25 dollars a pair. They are having a sale where all ice skates are increased by 8 dollars. How much would a pair of ice skates cost during the sale?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The original price of a pair of ice skates is $25. During the sale, the price is increased by $8, so the new price would be $25 + $8 = $33.
### Answer: $33

Expected answer: 33

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, the shop sells ice skates at 25 dollars a pair on sale. After the increase, a pair of ice skates is priced at 33 dollars. If a customer only has 70 dollars, how much money will they have left after buying a pair of ice skates during the sale?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The customer has $70 and wants to buy a pair of ice skates that costs $33. To find out how much money they will have left, we subtract the cost of the ice skates from the amount of money they have:

$70 - $33 = $37

The customer will have $37 left after buying a pair of ice skates during the sale.
### Answer: $37

Expected answer: 37

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, the price of ice skates was 25 dollars a pair before the price increase. Now, consider a scenario where the original price of the ice skates was 79 dollars a pair instead of 25 dollars. If the price was increased by the same amount, 8 dollars, how much would a pair of ice skates cost now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The original price of a pair of ice skates is $79. During the sale, the price is increased by $8, so the new price would be $79 + $8 = $87.
### Answer: $87

Expected answer: 87

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A river flows at a speed of 96 miles per day. How far would it have travelled in 31 days?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The river flows at a speed of 96 miles per day. To find the distance it would travel in 31 days, we multiply the speed by the number of days: 96 miles/day ร— 31 days = 2,976 miles.
### Answer: 2,976

Expected answer: 2976

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, if the river also carried a piece of debris that got an additional 94 miles downstream due to the wind in those 31 days, how far would the piece of debris have traveled in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The piece of debris traveled the same distance as the river, which is 2,976 miles. Additionally, it got an extra 94 miles due to the wind. To find the total distance traveled by the piece of debris, we add the two distances: 2,976 miles + 94 miles = 3,070 miles.
### Answer: 3,070

Expected answer: 3070

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, suppose the river flow was less than initially thought. Rather than flowing at a speed of 96 miles per day, it actually flows at a speed of 12 miles per day. How far would the river have traveled in 31 days at this slower speed?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The river flows at a speed of 12 miles per day. To find the distance it would travel in 31 days, we multiply the speed by the number of days: 12 miles/day ร— 31 days = 372 miles.
### Answer: 372

Expected answer: 372

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A manufacturer produces 46 blankets each day. After 43 days, an additional 42 blankets were donated to the manufacturer. How many blankets does the manufacturer now have in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The manufacturer produces 46 blankets each day for 43 days, so the total number of blankets produced is 46 x 43 = 1978.
The manufacturer receives an additional 42 blankets, so the total number of blankets is 1978 + 42 = 2020.
### Answer: 2020

Expected answer: 2020

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A particular star emits light at a velocity of 1095 miles per second. If this velocity were divided by 73, what would be the resulting speed of the light emitted by the star?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the resulting speed, we need to divide the original velocity by 73.

1095 รท 73 = 15

So, the resulting speed of the light emitted by the star would be 15 miles per second.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following our previous scenario, let's consider that instead of dividing by 73, the velocity of the star's light was divided by 42. What would be the resulting speed of the light emitted by the star, given this new calculation?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the resulting speed, we need to divide the original velocity by 42.

1095 รท 42 = 26.07 (approximately)

So, the resulting speed of the light emitted by the star would be approximately 26.07 miles per second.

### Answer: 26.07

Expected answer: 365/14

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A lemon tree produces 99 lemons every year. After 51 years, a massive wind storm passes through the area and removes 84 lemons from the total number of lemons the tree produced. How many lemons did the lemon tree produce after the wind storm?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The lemon tree produces 99 lemons every year. After 51 years, the total number of lemons produced is 99 x 51 = 5035.
After the wind storm, 84 lemons are removed, leaving 5035 - 84 = 4951 lemons.
### Answer: 4951

Expected answer: 4965

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: John had 4 packs of building blocks and each pack contains 89 blocks. After losing 72 blocks while playing, how many blocks does John have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: John had 4 packs of building blocks, and each pack contains 89 blocks, so he had a total of 4 x 89 = 356 blocks initially.
After losing 72 blocks, John has 356 - 72 = 284 blocks left.
### Answer: 284

Expected answer: 284

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Instead of the initial 89 blocks in each pack, John found out that 41 blocks were in each of his 4 packs. After losing 72 blocks, how many blocks does John have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: John had 4 packs of building blocks, and each pack contains 41 blocks, so he had a total of 4 x 41 = 164 blocks initially.
After losing 72 blocks, John has 164 - 72 = 92 blocks left.
### Answer: 92

Expected answer: 92

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: On a particular beach, 5544 seashells are evenly distributed across 72 meters of sand. How many seashells are there on average for every meter of the beach?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the average number of seashells per meter, we can divide the total number of seashells (5544) by the total length of the beach (72 meters).

5544 รท 72 = 77

So, on average, there are 77 seashells per meter of the beach.

### Answer: 77

Expected answer: 77

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a revised count, it was discovered that the seashells were actually spread over 92 meters of the beach instead of 72 meters as previously thought. Now, how many seashells are there on average for each meter of the beach?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since the total number of seashells remains the same (5544), but the length of the beach has increased to 92 meters, we need to recalculate the average number of seashells per meter.

5544 รท 92 = 60

So, on average, there are 60 seashells per meter of the beach.

### Answer: 60

Expected answer: 1386/23

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: There are 82 animals in the zoo. If 67 animals are birds, how many animals in the zoo are not birds?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since there are 67 birds, the number of animals that are not birds is the total number of animals minus the number of birds.
82 - 67 = <<82-67=15>>15 animals in the zoo are not birds.
### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a revision to the previous count, it turns out there were only 38 birds instead of 67 at the zoo originally. Given this, how many animals in the zoo were not birds?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since there are now 38 birds, the number of animals that are not birds is the total number of animals minus the number of birds.
82 - 38 = <<82-38=44>>44 animals in the zoo are not birds.
### Answer: 44

Expected answer: 44

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A construction company builds 36 houses every month. If they kept this pace up for 46 months, how many houses would they have built over this time?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The construction company builds 36 houses every month. To find the total number of houses built over 46 months, we multiply the number of houses built per month by the number of months:

36 houses/month ร— 46 months = 36 ร— 46 = 1656

### Answer: 1656

Expected answer: 1656

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the same construction company's new plan, instead of building 36 houses they are planning to build 75 houses a month. If they managed to keep up this pace for the same period of 46 months, how many houses would they have built in total with this increased productivity?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The construction company is planning to build 75 houses every month. To find the total number of houses built over 46 months, we multiply the number of houses built per month by the number of months:

75 houses/month ร— 46 months = 75 ร— 46 = 3450

### Answer: 3450

Expected answer: 3450

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A window factory has a goal to produce 1767 windows within a month. If the factory operates 31 days a month, how many windows does it need to produce each day to meet its goal?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory needs to produce 1767 windows in 31 days.
To find out how many windows the factory needs to produce each day, we can divide the total number of windows by the number of days: 1767 รท 31 = 57.
### Answer: 57

Expected answer: 57

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous situation, suppose the factory decided to cut down its monthly goal and now aims to produce only 50 windows in a month. Based on this new target, how many windows does the factory need to produce each day if it still operates for 31 days in a month?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory aims to produce 50 windows in 31 days.
To find out how many windows the factory needs to produce each day, we can divide the total number of windows by the number of days: 50 รท 31 = 1.61 (approximately).
### Answer: 1.61

Expected answer: 50/31

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A TV series has just been renewed for its third season. The 1st season had 66 episodes, the 2nd season had 67 episodes, and now 8 episodes of the 3rd season have been aired. How many episodes have aired in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total number of episodes aired in the 1st and 2nd seasons is 66 + 67 = 133.
Adding the 8 episodes aired in the 3rd season, the total number of episodes aired is 133 + 8 = 141.
### Answer: 141

Expected answer: 141

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the 8 episodes of the 3rd season were aired, the TV series continued to air more episodes. In the remaining part of the 3rd season, they aired 80 episodes. They have also just finished airing all the 82 episodes of the 4th season. How many episodes have aired in total now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total number of episodes aired in the 1st and 2nd seasons is 66 + 67 = 133.
The 8 episodes aired in the 3rd season, and then 80 more episodes were aired in the remaining part of the 3rd season, making a total of 8 + 80 = 88 episodes aired in the 3rd season.
Adding the 88 episodes aired in the 3rd season to the 133 episodes aired in the 1st and 2nd seasons, the total number of episodes aired before the 4th season is 133 + 88 = 221.
The 82 episodes aired in the 4th season are added to the total, making the total number of episodes aired now 221 + 82 = 303.
### Answer: 303

Expected answer: 303

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's imagine that in the first two seasons of the TV series there were fewer episodes than we initially thought. The 1st season had 66 episodes and the second season only had 8. After 8 more episodes of the 3rd season aired, how many total episodes have aired so far?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total number of episodes aired in the 1st and 2nd seasons is 66 + 8 = 74.
Adding the 8 episodes aired in the 3rd season, the total number of episodes aired is 74 + 8 = 82.
### Answer: 82

Expected answer: 82

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: At the end of a rainbow, a leprechaun is guarding a pot of gold coins. He adds 39 gold coins to the pot, then another 47. However, while he is distracted, a fairy takes away 8 gold coins from the pot. The new total of coins becomes a code to a magical lock. The code must be enhanced by adding 48 to it only once, and then multiplied by 24. What is the final value to unlock the magical lock?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The leprechaun adds 39 and 47 coins to the pot, so initially, there are 39 + 47 = 86 coins.
The fairy takes away 8 coins, leaving 86 - 8 = 78 coins.
The code is enhanced by adding 48 to it only once, so we add 48 to 78, getting 78 + 48 = 126.
Finally, the code is multiplied by 24, so we multiply 126 by 24, getting 126 ร— 24 = 3024.
### Answer: 3024

Expected answer: 3024

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: The leprechaun realizes that there was a mistake in the first part of his magical lock code. Instead of multiplying the initial set of gold coin count by 24 after adding 48, he should have multiplied it by 29. Given this new information, what should be the correct initial value to unlock the magical lock?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The leprechaun adds 39 and 47 coins to the pot, so initially, there are 39 + 47 = 86 coins.
The fairy takes away 8 coins, leaving 86 - 8 = 78 coins.
The code is enhanced by adding 48 to it only once, so we add 48 to 78, getting 78 + 48 = 126.
The code is multiplied by 29, so we multiply 126 by 29, getting 126 ร— 29 = 3654.
### Answer: 3654

Expected answer: 3654

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: John has 98 dollars in his wallet. He found a 35-dollar bill on the ground and added it to his wallet. However, he then spent 38 dollars on lunch. How much money does he have left in his wallet now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: John initially had 98 dollars.
He found a 35-dollar bill and added it to his wallet, so he now has 98 + 35 = 133 dollars.
However, he spent 38 dollars on lunch, so he now has 133 - 38 = 95 dollars left in his wallet.
### Answer: 95

Expected answer: 95

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenarios, let's reconsider the scenario like this: suppose the amount that John decided to spend on lunch was not 38 dollars, but actually 68 dollars. How much money does he have left in his wallet after this change?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: John initially had 98 dollars.
He found a 35-dollar bill and added it to his wallet, so he now has 98 + 35 = 133 dollars.
However, he spent 68 dollars on lunch, so he now has 133 - 68 = 65 dollars left in his wallet.
### Answer: 65

Expected answer: 65

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A bottling factory fills 3840 bottles every hour. How many bottles does it fill every minute?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory fills 3840 bottles every hour. There are 60 minutes in an hour, so to find the number of bottles filled every minute, we can divide 3840 by 60.
3840 รท 60 = 64
### Answer: 64

Expected answer: 64

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the bottling factory, an upgrade to the machines increases the manufacturing speed by 19 bottles per minute. After the upgrade, how many bottles does the factory fill every minute?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory fills 64 bottles every minute initially. After the upgrade, the speed increases by 19 bottles per minute, so the new speed is:
64 + 19 = 83
### Answer: 83

Expected answer: 83

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the bottling factory, imagine that before the upgrade, the machinery was even slower, filling bottles at a rate of 3840 bottles every 18 hours, instead of 60 minutes. How many bottles were being filled every hour in that case?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory fills 3840 bottles every 18 hours. To find the number of bottles filled every hour, we can divide 3840 by 18.
3840 รท 18 = 213.33
Since we can't fill a fraction of a bottle, we round down to the nearest whole number.
213.33 โ†’ 213
### Answer: 213

Expected answer: 640/3

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: In a mystical world, a dragon has 1702 treasures in his cave. If he divides these treasures among his 37 faithful gnomes and then decides to add another 49 treasures to each one, how many treasures does each gnome now have?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The dragon initially divides the 1702 treasures among his 37 faithful gnomes, so each gnome gets 1702/37 = 45.91 treasures (we'll round this to 46 treasures since you can't divide a treasure).
Then, the dragon adds 49 more treasures to each gnome, so each gnome now has 46 + 49 = 95 treasures.
### Answer: 95

Expected answer: 95

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, imagine that instead of adding 49 treasures to each gnome's share, the dragon decided to add 79 treasures. How many treasures does each gnome now have?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The dragon initially divides the 1702 treasures among his 37 faithful gnomes, so each gnome gets 1702/37 = 45.91 treasures (we'll round this to 46 treasures since you can't divide a treasure).
Then, the dragon adds 79 more treasures to each gnome, so each gnome now has 46 + 79 = 125 treasures.
### Answer: 125

Expected answer: 125

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: If a frog can hop 192 inches in total and on average, hops 6 inches per single leap, how many leaps does it take for the frog to reach the end of its journey?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The frog hops a total of 192 inches. If it hops 6 inches per leap, we can divide the total distance by the distance per leap to find the number of leaps:

192 inches รท 6 inches/leap = 32 leaps

### Answer: 32

Expected answer: 32

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous scenario, let's say the frog has increased its leaping ability and can now hop 83 inches in total with an average of 6 inches per leap. How many leaps does it take for the frog to complete this new journey?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The frog hops a total of 83 inches. If it hops 6 inches per leap, we can divide the total distance by the distance per leap to find the number of leaps:

83 inches รท 6 inches/leap = 13.83 leaps

Since you can't take a fraction of a leap, we round up to the nearest whole number:

13.83 leaps โ†’ 14 leaps

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 83/6

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A cheese factory produces 5865 kg of cheese evenly over 85 days. How much cheese does the factory produce each day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find out how much cheese the factory produces each day, we need to divide the total amount of cheese produced (5865 kg) by the number of days (85).

5865 kg รท 85 days = 69 kg/day

### Answer: 69 kg/day

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing with the scenario of the cheese factory, let's say the factory now operates 31 days a month rather than 85 days, with the overall cheese production still being 5865 kg. How much cheese would now be produced each day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since the total amount of cheese produced remains the same (5865 kg), we can set up a proportion to find the new daily production:

Total cheese produced / Number of days = Daily cheese production

5865 kg / 31 days = x kg/day

To solve for x, we can divide both sides by 31:

x = 5865 kg รท 31 days
x = 189 kg/day

### Answer: 189 kg/day

Expected answer: 5865/31

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A cucumber farm yields 2592 cucumbers per 54 plants. If a section of the farm grows 38 plants, subtracting the 74 cucumbers that were damaged, how many cucumbers are available for sale?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The number of cucumbers per plant is 2592/54 = 48.
The number of cucumbers for 38 plants is 38 x 48 = 1824.
After subtracting the damaged cucumbers, the number of cucumbers available for sale is 1824 - 74 = 1750.
### Answer: 1750

Expected answer: 1750

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a new scenario, where an exact amount of 1 cucumber is damaged instead of 74 in the section growing 38 plants, how many cucumbers would now be available for sale from that section?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The number of cucumbers per plant is 48.
The number of cucumbers for 38 plants is 38 x 48 = 1824.
After subtracting the damaged cucumber, the number of cucumbers available for sale is 1824 - 1 = 1823.
### Answer: 1823

Expected answer: 1823

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A toy car battery lasts 16 hours. However, if the car's lights are used, the battery life decreases by the equivalent of 36 divided by 9 hours. Assuming the toy car is run with the lights on for 12 full weeks, each week considered to be 60 hours, how long did the battery last?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The battery lasts 16 hours initially. If the lights are used, the battery life decreases by 36/9 = 4 hours. So, the battery life with lights on is 16 - 4 = 12 hours.
The toy car is run with lights on for 12 weeks, each week being 60 hours. So, the total hours with lights on is 12 x 60 = 720 hours.
The battery life with lights on is 12 hours, so the battery will last for 720/12 = 60 times.
The initial battery life is 16 hours, so the total battery life is 60 x 16 = 960 hours.
### Answer: 960

Expected answer: 8640

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A hand-crafted leather wallet costs 2407 dollars. If you can pay this in 83 installments, how much money would each installment be?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the amount of each installment, we need to divide the total cost of the wallet by the number of installments.

Total cost of the wallet = 2407 dollars
Number of installments = 83

Amount of each installment = Total cost of the wallet รท Number of installments
= 2407 รท 83
= 29.02

### Answer: 29.02

Expected answer: 29

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A big grizzly bear feasts on 2726 ounces of salmon during a 58-day summer period. How much salmon does the bear eat each day on average?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the average amount of salmon eaten per day, we need to divide the total amount of salmon eaten (2726 ounces) by the number of days (58).

2726 ounces รท 58 days = 47 ounces per day

### Answer: 47 ounces per day.

Expected answer: 47

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the original problem, the big grizzly bear ate 2726 ounces of salmon over a 58-day summer period. However, what would have been the daily average if the bear had eaten the same total amount of salmon but over a shorter 50-day period instead?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: If the bear eats the same total amount of salmon (2726 ounces) over a shorter 50-day period, we need to divide the total amount by the new number of days to find the new daily average.

2726 ounces รท 50 days = 54.52 ounces per day

### Answer: 54.52 ounces per day.

Expected answer: 1363/25

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A farmer has two patches of land. One patch yields 26 carrots and the other yields 16 carrots. If every day for 77 days, the farmer collects the same amount of carrots, how many carrots has the farmer collected in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farmer has two patches of land, one yielding 26 carrots and the other yielding 16 carrots. To find the total number of carrots the farmer has, we add the number of carrots from both patches: 26 + 16 = 42 carrots per day.

Since the farmer collects the same amount of carrots every day for 77 days, we multiply the number of carrots per day by the number of days: 42 carrots/day ร— 77 days = 3246 carrots.

### Answer: 3246

Expected answer: 3234

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A clothes store had 71 pairs of pants in stock at the beginning of the week. They received an additional shipment of 39 pairs, but then sold 54 pairs. How many pairs of pants does the store have in stock now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store had 71 pairs of pants initially.
They received an additional shipment of 39 pairs, so the total number of pants is 71 + 39 = 110.
Then, they sold 54 pairs, so the remaining number of pants is 110 - 54 = 56.
### Answer: 56

Expected answer: 56

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A chef uses 483g of sugar to make 7 of her special cakes. How much sugar does she use for each cake?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the amount of sugar used for each cake, we need to divide the total amount of sugar used (483g) by the number of cakes (7).

483g รท 7 = 69g

So, the chef uses 69g of sugar for each cake.

### Answer: 69g

Expected answer: 69

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the next batch, the chef decided to add an extra 25g of sugar to her special cake recipe to make it sweeter. How much sugar does she use now for each cake?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since the chef added 25g of sugar to each cake, we need to add 25g to the original amount of sugar used per cake (69g).

69g + 25g = 94g

So, the chef now uses 94g of sugar for each cake.

### Answer: 94g

Expected answer: 94

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After receiving some feedback, the chef used less sugar in her next batch of cakes. She used only 65g for seven cakes. How much sugar does she use now for each cake?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The chef used 65g of sugar for 7 cakes. To find the amount of sugar used for each cake, we need to divide the total amount of sugar used (65g) by the number of cakes (7).

65g รท 7 = 9.29g

So, the chef now uses approximately 9.29g of sugar for each cake.

### Answer: 9.29g

Expected answer: 65/7

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A kite maker has 41 blue, 63 red, and 57 green kites. If they give away 98 kites and create an additional 3 kites, how many kites does the maker have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, the kite maker has 41 + 63 + 57 = 161 kites.
After giving away 98 kites, the kite maker has 161 - 98 = 63 kites left.
After creating 3 more kites, the kite maker has 63 + 3 = 66 kites now.
### Answer: 66

Expected answer: 66

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following up with the earlier situation of the kite maker who had 41 blue, 63 red, and 57 green kites, gave away 98 kites, and created an additional 3 kites: If the kite maker decided to ramp up production and multiply their current inventory by 18, then add the original inventory to this increased production, how many kites would the they have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, the kite maker has 66 kites (after giving away 98 and creating 3 more).
If they multiply their current inventory by 18, they would have 66 * 18 = 1188 kites.
Adding the original inventory to this increased production, they would have 1188 + 66 = 1254 kites now.
### Answer: 1254

Expected answer: 1254

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the kite maker gave away some kites and made new ones, let's change the circumstances a bit. Instead of giving away 98 kites, they only gave away 19 kites. Taking into account that they still made an additional 3 kites, how many kites does the maker have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, the kite maker has 41 + 63 + 57 = 161 kites.
After giving away 19 kites, the kite maker has 161 - 19 = 142 kites left.
After creating 3 more kites, the kite maker has 142 + 3 = 145 kites now.
### Answer: 145

Expected answer: 145

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A teddy bear company produces 7644 teddy bears in a span of 91 days. How many teddy bears does the company approximately makes each day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the number of teddy bears produced per day, we can divide the total number of teddy bears produced (7644) by the number of days (91).

7644 รท 91 = 84

So, the company approximately produces 84 teddy bears each day.

### Answer: 84

Expected answer: 84

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing their production numbers, the teddy bear company realized that they actually produce 7644 teddy bears in a span of 50 days, not 91 days. How many teddy bears does the company approximately makes each day now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since the company produces 7644 teddy bears in 50 days, we can divide the total number of teddy bears produced by the number of days to find the daily production:

7644 รท 50 = 152.88

So, the company approximately produces 153 teddy bears each day.

### Answer: 153

Expected answer: 3822/25

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A train travels at a speed of 68 mph but due to certain restrictions, it had to slow down to 28 mph. Considering the travel time of 21 hours, calculate the impact on the total distance traveled by the train.

Llama 3 8B:

Let's break this problem down step by step:

1. The train travels at 68 mph for some time, let's call it x hours. The distance traveled during this time is:

Distance = Speed x Time = 68 x x = 68x

2. The train then slows down to 28 mph and travels for the remaining time, which is 21 - x hours. The distance traveled during this time is:

Distance = Speed x Time = 28 x (21 - x)

3. The total distance traveled by the train is the sum of the distances traveled during these two periods:

Total Distance = 68x + 28(21 - x)

We know that the total time taken by the train is 21 hours, so we can set up the equation:

x + (21 - x) = 21

Simplifying the equation, we get:

x = 10.5

So, the train travels at 68 mph for 10.5 hours and at 28 mph for 10.5 hours.

4. Now, we can calculate the total distance traveled by the train:

Total Distance = 68(10.5) + 28(10.5)
= 713 + 294
= 1007

The impact on the total distance traveled by the train due to slowing down is a reduction of:

1007 - (68 x 21) = 1007 - 1426 = -419 miles

The train travels 419 miles less than it would have if it had maintained its original speed of 68 mph for the entire 21 hours.

### Answer: -419 miles.

Expected answer: 840

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: An alien spacecraft traveled 95 light-years to reach Earth, but had to stop 70 light-years along the way at a space buoy for refueling. How many light-years did it travel after refueling to reach Earth?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The spacecraft traveled 70 light-years before refueling, and then it refueled. After refueling, it still had to travel 95 - 70 = 25 light-years to reach Earth.
### Answer: 25

Expected answer: 25

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: The alien spaceship initially traveled 95 light-years to reach Earth. But let's consider a scenario where they could only stop 60 light-years along the way at a space buoy for refueling instead of 70 light-years. In that case, how many light-years would the spaceship have to travel after refueling to reach Earth?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The spacecraft traveled 60 light-years before refueling, and then it refueled. After refueling, it still had to travel 95 - 60 = 35 light-years to reach Earth.
### Answer: 35

Expected answer: 35

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: In a popular game, a character starts with a health value of 82. After being attacked by a rival character, his health value decreases by 69. What is the character's remaining health value?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The character's initial health value is 82. After being attacked, his health value decreases by 69. To find the remaining health value, we subtract 69 from 82.

82 - 69 = 13

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In our previous scenario, the character started with a health value of 82. What if, instead of being attacked and losing 69 health points, he was attacked by a weaker rival character and only lost 33 health points. What would be the character's remaining health value in this new scenario?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The character's initial health value is still 82. This time, his health value decreases by 33. To find the remaining health value, we subtract 33 from 82.

82 - 33 = 49

### Answer: 49

Expected answer: 49

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A designer creates 77 dresses in a week and sells them for $16 each. After a week, he subtracts a cost of $27 for fabric damage. How much did the designer earn after accounting for the fabric damage?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The designer sells 77 dresses for $16 each, so the total revenue is 77 x 16 = <<77 x 16=1232>>1232 dollars.
After subtracting the cost of $27 for fabric damage, the designer's earnings are 1232 - 27 = <<1232-27=1205>>1205 dollars.
### Answer: 1205

Expected answer: 1205

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A snail travels 66 inches in a day. In addition to that, the snail extracted energy from 704 lettuce leaves over 22 days, allowing it to move an additional inch per day. How far in inches does the snail travel in a day with the additional energy?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The snail travels 66 inches in a day without the additional energy. With the additional energy, it travels an additional 1 inch per day. So, the total distance traveled per day is 66 + 1 = 67 inches.
### Answer: 67

Expected answer: 98

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A cake recipe calls for using 65 grams of sugar. If a bakery prepares 29 such cakes and then adds 46 more grams for frosting, how many grams of sugar did they use in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: For each cake, the bakery uses 65 grams of sugar. For 29 cakes, they use 29 x 65 = 1885 grams of sugar.
Adding 46 grams for frosting, they use 1885 + 46 = 1931 grams of sugar in total.
### Answer: 1931

Expected answer: 1931

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A skateboard company makes 36 freestyle skateboards and 92 downhill skateboards in a day. How many skateboards does it make in total in a day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The company makes 36 freestyle skateboards and 92 downhill skateboards, so to find the total number of skateboards made, we add these two numbers together.
36 + 92 = <<36+92=128>>128
### Answer: 128

Expected answer: 128

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: The skateboard company decides to extend its production over 21 days but had to discard 65 skateboards due to quality issues. How many skateboards did they make in the span of these 21 days after discarding the faulty ones?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The company makes 128 skateboards per day, and they produce for 21 days. So, the total number of skateboards made is:
128 x 21 = <<128*21=2688>>

However, they had to discard 65 skateboards due to quality issues. To find the total number of skateboards made after discarding the faulty ones, we subtract 65 from the total number of skateboards made:
2688 - 65 = <<2688-65=2623>>

### Answer: 2623

Expected answer: 2623

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose now the company produces 82 freestyle skateboards instead of 36, while still producing 92 downhill skateboards daily. How many skateboards does it make in total in a day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The company makes 82 freestyle skateboards and 92 downhill skateboards, so to find the total number of skateboards made, we add these two numbers together.
82 + 92 = <<82+92=174>>174
### Answer: 174

Expected answer: 174

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A cafรฉ sells hot chocolate for 42 dollars per cup. One day, they sold 78 cups of hot chocolate and made an extra 58 dollars from selling marshmallows. What is the total revenue of that day from selling hot chocolate and marshmallows?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The cafรฉ sold 78 cups of hot chocolate, and each cup costs 42 dollars. So, the revenue from selling hot chocolate is 78 x 42 = 3258 dollars.
The cafรฉ made an extra 58 dollars from selling marshmallows. So, the total revenue is 3258 + 58 = 3316 dollars.
### Answer: 3316

Expected answer: 3334

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A river tour boat can hold 58 adults. If an additional 4 children can also board the boat, what is the total number of passengers the boat can carry?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The boat can hold 58 adults. If 4 children can also board the boat, the total number of passengers is 58 (adults) + 4 (children) = 62.
### Answer: 62

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that the river tour boat could originally only hold 58 adults. It has now been modified to increase its capacity by 3 more adults. Taking this into account, how many total adults can the boat hold now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The boat could originally hold 58 adults. It has been modified to increase its capacity by 3 more adults, so the new capacity is 58 + 3 = 61 adults.
### Answer: 61

Expected answer: 61

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: If a monkey gets ((360 bananas / 12 months) + 16 extra bananas) per month, how many bananas does the monkey get in a month?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The monkey gets 360 bananas divided by 12 months, which is 30 bananas per month. Adding 16 extra bananas, the monkey gets 30 + 16 = 46 bananas per month.
### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: If in the next month, the monkey received additional bananas, bringing its total to ((360 bananas / 12 months) + 16 extra bananas + 79 more bananas) but then 67 of them were stolen, how many bananas does the monkey have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The monkey gets 360 bananas divided by 12 months, which is 30 bananas per month. Adding 16 extra bananas, the monkey gets 30 + 16 = 46 bananas per month. Adding 79 more bananas, the monkey gets 46 + 79 = 125 bananas. After 67 bananas are stolen, the monkey has 125 - 67 = 58 bananas left.
### Answer: 58

Expected answer: 58

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if, instead of getting 360 bananas a year, the monkey only got 360 bananas every 20 months? If the monkey also got 16 extra bananas per month, how many bananas would the monkey get in a month?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The monkey gets 360 bananas every 20 months, so the monkey gets 360/20 = 18 bananas per month. Adding 16 extra bananas, the monkey gets 18 + 16 = 34 bananas per month.
### Answer: 34

Expected answer: 34

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A starfish has 5 arms. If there were 360 degrees in a circle, how many degrees would be in each section if it were to be equally divided amongst the starfish's arms?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since there are 360 degrees in a circle, and the starfish has 5 arms, we can divide 360 by 5 to find the number of degrees in each section.

360 รท 5 = 72

So, each section would have 72 degrees.

### Answer: 72

Expected answer: 72

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous problem, what if the starfish was an unusual species with 17 arms instead of 5? If there were still 360 degrees in a circle, how many degrees would be in each section if it were to be equally divided amongst the starfish's arms?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since there are 360 degrees in a circle, and the starfish has 17 arms, we can divide 360 by 17 to find the number of degrees in each section.

360 รท 17 = 21.18

Since we can't divide degrees into fractions, we round the result to the nearest whole number. In this case, we round 21.18 to 21.

So, each section would have approximately 21 degrees.

### Answer: 21

Expected answer: 360/17

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: There's a toy store that has 26 stuffed rabbits. If they decide to order an additional 84 stuffed rabbits and 36 stuffed bears, how many stuffed animals will they have in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The toy store already has 26 stuffed rabbits.
They will order 84 more stuffed rabbits, so they will have 26 + 84 = 110 stuffed rabbits.
They will also order 36 stuffed bears, so they will have a total of 110 + 36 = 146 stuffed animals.
### Answer: 146

Expected answer: 146

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: The toy store received a special toy order of 1 rare stuffed panda in addition to their previous order. After adding the special order, how many stuffed animals will the toy store have in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The toy store already has 146 stuffed animals (from the previous order).
They received a special order of 1 rare stuffed panda, so they will now have 146 + 1 = 147 stuffed animals.
### Answer: 147

Expected answer: 147

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: On Monday, Rachel watched 35 minutes of TV. On Tuesday, she watched 48 minutes in the morning and 13 more in the evening. How many minutes of TV did Rachel watch on both days?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Rachel watched 48 minutes of TV on Tuesday morning.
She watched 13 more minutes of TV on Tuesday evening, so she watched 48 + 13 = 61 minutes of TV on Tuesday.
Rachel watched 35 minutes of TV on Monday.
In total, Rachel watched 35 + 61 = 96 minutes of TV on both days.
### Answer: 96

Expected answer: 96

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: On Wednesday, Rachel watched 68 minutes of TV but decided to reduce her screen time by the amount she had watched on Monday. How many total minutes of TV did Rachel watch on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday after reducing her Wednesday screen time?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Rachel watched 68 minutes of TV on Wednesday.
She decided to reduce her screen time by the amount she had watched on Monday, which was 35 minutes.
So, she reduced her Wednesday screen time by 35 minutes, leaving her with 68 - 35 = 33 minutes of TV watched on Wednesday.
Rachel watched 96 minutes of TV on Monday and Tuesday.
In total, Rachel watched 96 + 33 = 129 minutes of TV on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday after reducing her Wednesday screen time.
### Answer: 129

Expected answer: 129

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: If on Monday instead of watching 35 minutes of TV, Rachel watched 37 minutes. Then, how many total minutes of TV did she watch on Monday and Tuesday?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Rachel watched 48 minutes of TV on Tuesday morning.
She watched 13 more minutes of TV on Tuesday evening, so she watched 48 + 13 = 61 minutes of TV on Tuesday.
Rachel watched 37 minutes of TV on Monday.
In total, Rachel watched 37 + 61 = 98 minutes of TV on both days.
### Answer: 98

Expected answer: 98

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A door manufacturing company can produce 2340 doors over a 90-day period. How many doors can the company produce in one day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The company can produce 2340 doors in 90 days. To find the number of doors produced per day, we can divide the total number of doors by the number of days.

2340 รท 90 = 26

### Answer: 26

Expected answer: 26

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A little mouse had stored 91 pieces of cheese for winter, but a thief mouse stole 77 pieces. The little mouse found 22 more pieces and a kind mouse gave him 12 more. How many pieces of cheese does the little mouse have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The little mouse initially had 91 pieces of cheese.
The thief mouse stole 77 pieces, leaving the little mouse with 91 - 77 = 14 pieces.
The little mouse found 22 more pieces, so now he has 14 + 22 = 36 pieces.
A kind mouse gave him 12 more pieces, so now he has 36 + 12 = 48 pieces.
### Answer: 48

Expected answer: 48

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A dolphin needs to have approximately 96 kilograms of fish and 22 kilograms of squid every day to stay healthy. If a dolphin's diet remained unchanged for 59 days, how much fish and squid in total, in kilograms, would the dolphin need?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The dolphin needs 96 kg of fish and 22 kg of squid every day. To find the total amount of fish and squid needed for 59 days, we multiply the daily amount by the number of days.

Fish: 96 kg/day ร— 59 days = 96 ร— 59 = 5676 kg
Squid: 22 kg/day ร— 59 days = 22 ร— 59 = 1298 kg
Total fish and squid: 5676 kg + 1298 kg = 6974 kg

### Answer: 6974

Expected answer: 6962

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: If Mandy has 18 building blocks and she received another 43, then decided to multiply the total by the initial number she had, how many building blocks would she have in the end?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Mandy initially had 18 building blocks. She received 43 more, so the total number of blocks she has is 18 + 43 = 61.
Then, she decided to multiply the total number of blocks by the initial number she had, which is 18. So, she multiplied 61 by 18, which gives 1098.
### Answer: 1098

Expected answer: 1098

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous problem, if Mandy decides to multiply the numbers of the building blocks she ends up with by the result of dividing 215 by 43, how many building blocks would she have then?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Mandy had 1098 building blocks initially. She decided to multiply this number by the result of dividing 215 by 43.
First, we calculate the division: 215 รท 43 = 5.
Then, we multiply the initial number of blocks by the result: 1098 ร— 5 = 5490.
### Answer: 5490

Expected answer: 5490

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing with the previous problem, suppose Mandy initially had 18 building blocks and received another 55, instead of the original 43. If she then multiplies the total by the initial 18 building blocks she had, how many building blocks would she have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Mandy initially had 18 building blocks. She received 55 more, so the total number of blocks she has is 18 + 55 = 73.
Then, she decided to multiply the total number of blocks by the initial number she had, which is 18. So, she multiplied 73 by 18, which gives 1314.
### Answer: 1314

Expected answer: 1314

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A ballerina practices for (28 - 11) hours a day, and she practices 10 times more on weekends. How much does she practice on weekends?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The ballerina practices for (28 - 11) = 17 hours a day, and she practices 10 times more on weekends.
So, she practices 17 x 10 = 170 hours on weekends.
### Answer: 170

Expected answer: 170

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose our ballerina decided to lessen her weekend practices to (28 - 11) hours but increased the frequency to 66 times. How many hours did she practice in total on the weekends now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The ballerina practices for (28 - 11) = 17 hours a day, and she practices 66 times on weekends.
So, she practices 17 x 66 = 1122 hours on weekends.
### Answer: 1122

Expected answer: 1122

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A deck of special cards contains 59 different kinds of cards, and for each kind, there are 49 cards. How many total cards are there in this deck?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since there are 59 different kinds of cards, and for each kind, there are 49 cards, we can multiply the number of kinds by the number of cards per kind to find the total number of cards.
59 kinds * 49 cards/kind = 59 * 49 = 2881
### Answer: 2881

Expected answer: 2891

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A farmer has a field where he grows grapevines. He has added 93 new vines to his field and 73 more after that. Unfortunately, 92 of the vines have died. How many vines does he have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farmer initially had vines, but the number is not specified. He added 93 new vines, making the total number of vines 93. Then, he added 73 more vines, making the total number of vines 93 + 73 = 166. After 92 vines died, the farmer was left with 166 - 92 = 74 vines.
### Answer: 74

Expected answer: 74

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: The farmer reevaluates his count and realizes that he made a mistake in his initial counting. He actually added 65 new vines to his field, instead of 93, then added 73 more vines and had 92 vines die. How many grapevines does he have in his field now with this corrected count?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farmer initially had vines, but the number is not specified. He added 65 new vines, making the total number of vines 65. Then, he added 73 more vines, making the total number of vines 65 + 73 = 138. After 92 vines died, the farmer was left with 138 - 92 = 46 vines.
### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A blanket factory makes 13 blankets in the morning and 81 in the afternoon, but returns 59 due to defects. Each blanket is sold at a price equal to 39 times the total number of good blankets they have, plus the number of good blankets. What's the total value of the blankets they've sold?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory makes 13 blankets in the morning and 81 in the afternoon, so the total number of blankets made is 13 + 81 = 94.
However, 59 blankets are returned due to defects, so the number of good blankets is 94 - 59 = 35.
The total value of the blankets sold is equal to 39 times the total number of good blankets, plus the number of good blankets. So, the total value is 39 * 35 + 35 = 1435.
### Answer: 1435

Expected answer: 1400

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A bus travels a distance of 1300 miles. If it does so in 20 equal stages, how many miles does the bus travel per stage?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the distance traveled per stage, we can divide the total distance by the number of stages.

1300 miles (total distance) รท 20 stages = 65 miles per stage

### Answer: 65

Expected answer: 65

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In our previous scenario, suppose instead of covering the distance in 20 equal stages, the bus decided to only stop 4 times, dividing the journey into equal parts. In that case, how many miles would the bus need to travel per stage?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since the bus stops 4 times, it means the journey is divided into 5 parts (including the starting and ending points). To find the distance traveled per stage, we can divide the total distance by the number of stages.

1300 miles (total distance) รท 5 stages = 260 miles per stage

### Answer: 260

Expected answer: 325

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A region usually receives 53 inches of rain each year. However, in a certain year, it only received 7 inches less than the usual amount. How many inches of rain did it receive that year?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The region received 7 inches less than the usual amount, which is 53 - 7 = 46 inches.
### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 46

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the region actually usually receives 69 inches of rain each year, instead of 53 as we previously thought. If it still received 7 inches less than the usual amount in the year we're considering, how many inches of rain did it receive that year?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The region received 7 inches less than the usual amount, which is 69 - 7 = 62 inches.
### Answer: 62

Expected answer: 62

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: In a complicated mechanical watch, there are 98 gears in the main mechanism and 61 gears in a side mechanism. After service, a watchmaker removed 80 gears from the watch. How many gears are there left in the watch now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, there are 98 + 61 = 159 gears in the watch.
After removing 80 gears, the number of gears left is 159 - 80 = 79.
### Answer: 79

Expected answer: 79

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Originally, the watchmaker removed 80 gears from the watch, leaving a certain number of gears. But what if the watchmaker only removed 8 gears instead of 80 from the total of 98 gears in the main mechanism and 61 gears in a side mechanism? How many gears would remain in the watch?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, there are 98 + 61 = 159 gears in the watch.
If the watchmaker removes 8 gears, the number of gears left is 159 - 8 = 151.
### Answer: 151

Expected answer: 151

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A company manufactures 1462 binoculars and distributes them equally among 43 stores. After subtracting 25 defective pieces from each store's stock, how many binoculars does each store end up with?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total number of binoculars distributed is 1462. Since they are distributed equally among 43 stores, each store gets 1462/43 = 34 binoculars.
After subtracting 25 defective pieces from each store's stock, each store has 34 - 25 = 9 binoculars left.
### Answer: 9

Expected answer: 9

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the binoculars already distributed, each store received an additional shipment of binoculars from a second manufacturing facility. The second facility produced 4104 binoculars and divided them equally among 57 stores. After accounting for this additional shipment, how many binoculars does each store end up with in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Each store received 34 binoculars initially. Then, each of the 43 stores received an additional shipment of 4104/57 = 72 binoculars from the second facility.
In total, each store has 34 + 72 = 106 binoculars.
### Answer: 106

Expected answer: 81

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a revision to the initial report, it turns out that 19 defective pieces were found in each store's binocular stock, rather than the originally believed 25. After making this correction, how many binoculars does each store end up with from the initial shipment?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total number of binoculars distributed is still 1462. Since they are distributed equally among 43 stores, each store gets 1462/43 = 34 binoculars.
After subtracting 19 defective pieces from each store's stock, each store has 34 - 19 = 15 binoculars left.
### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A camera shop stocks 25 DSLR cameras. They receive a delivery of 71 new DSLR cameras and for promotional reasons, the shop decides to multiply the total number of cameras by 77. How many cameras does the shop have for promotion?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The shop initially has 25 DSLR cameras.
They receive a delivery of 71 new DSLR cameras, so the total number of cameras becomes 25 + 71 = 96.
The shop decides to multiply the total number of cameras by 77, so the total number of cameras becomes 96 * 77 = 7392.
### Answer: 7392

Expected answer: 7392

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, let's revisit the promotional event. Suppose this time the shop had decided to multiply the total number of cameras by 56 instead of 77 after receiving the same initial stock of 71 new DSLR cameras. How many cameras would the shop have had for promotion in this case?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The shop initially has 25 DSLR cameras.
They receive a delivery of 71 new DSLR cameras, so the total number of cameras becomes 25 + 71 = 96.
The shop decides to multiply the total number of cameras by 56, so the total number of cameras becomes 96 * 56 = 5376.
### Answer: 5376

Expected answer: 5376

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: On average, a construction company can build 1425 square feet of a house in 19 days. If they worked for 14 days, how many square feet would they have built?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The construction company builds 1425 square feet in 19 days, so the rate at which they build is 1425/19 = 75 square feet per day.
If they worked for 14 days, they would have built 75 x 14 = 1050 square feet.
### Answer: 1050

Expected answer: 1050

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A farmer starts the day with 18 tomatoes in his basket. By midday, he manages to harvest some more, bringing the total to 18 + 82 tomatoes in the basket. Unfortunately, 37 of these tomatoes are deemed unsellable because they are not ripe enough. How many tomatoes does the farmer have left in the basket that are ready to sell?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farmer starts with 18 tomatoes. He harvests more, bringing the total to 18 + 82 = 100 tomatoes. However, 37 of these tomatoes are unsellable, leaving 100 - 37 = 63 tomatoes. These 63 tomatoes are ready to sell.
### Answer: 63

Expected answer: 63

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a similar situation as before, the farmer started his day with a different quantity of 95 tomatoes in his basket. Just like the previous day, by midday, he managed to harvest some more, bringing the total to 95 + 82 tomatoes in the basket. Unfortunately, he found that 37 of these tomatoes were not ripe enough to sell. How many ripe tomatoes did the farmer have left in his basket after this day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farmer starts with 95 tomatoes. He harvests more, bringing the total to 95 + 82 = 177 tomatoes. However, 37 of these tomatoes are unsellable, leaving 177 - 37 = 140 tomatoes. These 140 tomatoes are ready to sell.
### Answer: 140

Expected answer: 140

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: In a soap manufacturing factory, they create soap in large blocks that are then cut into smaller bars. If each large block can be cut into 1424 bars of soap, but they package the soap in bundles of 16 bars each, how many packages can they make from one large block of soap?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since each large block can be cut into 1424 bars, we need to find out how many bundles of 16 bars each can be made from 1424 bars.
1424 bars / 16 bars per bundle = 89 bundles.
### Answer: 89

Expected answer: 89

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the initial situation in the soap manufacturing factory, suppose now they have decided to cut the large soap blocks into smaller bars such that each block can now be cut into 1424 bars of soap. However, this time they plan to package the soap in bundles of 36 bars each instead of 16. How many packages can they make from one large block of soap under this new arrangement?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since each large block can be cut into 1424 bars, we need to find out how many bundles of 36 bars each can be made from 1424 bars.
1424 bars / 36 bars per bundle = 39.78 bundles (approximately).
Since you can't package a fraction of a bundle, we round down to the nearest whole number.
### Answer: 39

Expected answer: 356/9

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A printer prints 2 sheets of paper with 37 letters each second. If it continues to print at this rate for 95 seconds, how many letters will be printed?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The printer prints 2 sheets of paper per second, and each sheet has 37 letters. So, the printer prints 2 x 37 = 74 letters per second.
In 95 seconds, the printer will print 74 x 95 = <<74 x 95=7030>>7030 letters.
### Answer: 7030

Expected answer: 7030

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous scenario, what if the printer only printed 2 sheets of paper with 4 letters each second instead of 37. Keeping the same printing duration of 95 seconds, how many letters would have been printed then?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The printer prints 2 sheets of paper per second, and each sheet has 4 letters. So, the printer prints 2 x 4 = 8 letters per second.
In 95 seconds, the printer will print 8 x 95 = <<8 x 95=760>>760 letters.
### Answer: 760

Expected answer: 760

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A potato farm produces 12 tons of potatoes per acre. They have a 3 acre plot of land which they use for growing potatoes. After the harvest, they found out that 71 tons were rotten, but they could salvage 44 tons. How many tons of potatoes do they have left?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farm produces 12 tons of potatoes per acre, and they have a 3-acre plot of land. So, the total production is 12 x 3 = 36 tons.
After the harvest, they found out that 71 tons were rotten, but they could salvage 44 tons. So, the total amount of potatoes left is 36 - 71 + 44 = 9 tons.
### Answer: 9

Expected answer: 9

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: If the potato farm had initially produced 56 tons of potatoes per acre instead of 12, how many tons of potatoes would they have left after considering the rotten and salvageable ones?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farm produces 56 tons of potatoes per acre, and they have a 3-acre plot of land. So, the total production is 56 x 3 = 168 tons.
After the harvest, they found out that 71 tons were rotten, but they could salvage 44 tons. So, the total amount of potatoes left is 168 - 71 + 44 = 141 tons.
### Answer: 141

Expected answer: 141

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A plane travels around the world, covering a distance of 360,000 miles. If it covers 72,000 miles per day, how many days does it take for the plane to travel around the world?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The plane travels 72,000 miles per day. To find the number of days it takes to travel 360,000 miles, we can divide the total distance by the distance traveled per day.

360,000 miles (total distance) รท 72,000 miles (distance per day) = 5 days

### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing the plane's logbook, the crew realizes there was a mistake in their calculations. Instead of covering 360,000 miles to travel around the world, it actually only took them 81,000 miles. Given this, how many days would it have taken them to travel around the world at a rate of 72,000 miles per day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The plane actually traveled 81,000 miles to travel around the world. To find the number of days it took, we can divide the total distance by the distance traveled per day.

81,000 miles (total distance) รท 72,000 miles (distance per day) = 1.125 days

Since you can't travel a fraction of a day, we round up to the nearest whole number to get the actual number of days.

1.125 days โ†’ 2 days

### Answer: 2

Expected answer: 9/8

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A fairy sprinkles magical dust at a rate of 4332 milligrams every 76 minutes. If she reduces her sprinkling rate by 44 milligrams and continues at this reduced rate for 52 minutes, how much magical dust will she sprinkle in that time?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The fairy's original rate is 4332 milligrams every 76 minutes. To find the rate per minute, we divide by 76: 4332/76 = 57 milligrams per minute.
After reducing the rate by 44 milligrams, the new rate is 57 - 44 = 13 milligrams per minute.
In 52 minutes, the fairy will sprinkle 13 x 52 = <<13*52=676>>676 milligrams of magical dust.
### Answer: 676

Expected answer: 676

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After sprinkling magical dust at the reduced rate for 52 minutes, the fairy finds an additional 49 milligrams of magical dust. How much total magical dust did she use in that time?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The fairy sprinkled 676 milligrams of magical dust in the 52 minutes at the reduced rate.
She then found an additional 49 milligrams of magical dust.
The total amount of magical dust she used is the sum of these two amounts: 676 + 49 = <<676+49=725>>725 milligrams.
### Answer: 725

Expected answer: 725

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: If the fairy had initially reduced her sprinkling rate to 22 minutes instead of 52 minutes, how much magical dust would she have sprinkled in that time with the reduced rate of 44 milligrams?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The fairy's original rate is 4332 milligrams every 76 minutes. To find the rate per minute, we divide by 76: 4332/76 = 57 milligrams per minute.
After reducing the rate by 44 milligrams, the new rate is 57 - 44 = 13 milligrams per minute.
In 22 minutes, the fairy will sprinkle 13 x 22 = <<13*22=286>>286 milligrams of magical dust.
### Answer: 286

Expected answer: 286

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: At the start of the camping trip, there were 56 logs to fuel the campfire. But after some time, the campers had used up 15 logs. How many logs are left for the rest of the trip?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The campers started with 56 logs. After using up 15 logs, they have 56 - 15 = 41 logs left.
### Answer: 41

Expected answer: 41

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After re-counting the initial logs at the start of the camping trip, there were actually 48 logs, not 56. After using up 15 logs, with this new count, how many logs are now left for the rest of the trip?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The campers started with 48 logs. After using up 15 logs, they have 48 - 15 = 33 logs left.
### Answer: 33

Expected answer: 33

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: John took 30 pictures with his new camera, but then he accidentally deleted 81 pictures. Fortunately, he was able to recover 61 of the deleted pictures. How many pictures does he have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: John started with 30 pictures.
He deleted 81 pictures, so he had 30 - 81 = -51 pictures left.
He recovered 61 pictures, so he now has -51 + 61 = 10 pictures.
### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, let's consider that instead of taking 30 pictures, John only took 21 pictures with his new camera before accidentally deleting 81 pictures. Like before, he was able to recover 61 of those deleted pictures. How many pictures does he have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: John started with 21 pictures.
He deleted 81 pictures, so he had 21 - 81 = -60 pictures left.
He recovered 61 pictures, so he now has -60 + 61 = 1 picture.
### Answer: 1

Expected answer: 1

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A tailor uses 20 square feet of fabric to make one teddy bear. If they use the same amount of fabric for every teddy bear, how much fabric will they need to make 20 teddy bears?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The tailor uses 20 square feet of fabric for each teddy bear. To make 20 teddy bears, they will need 20 x 20 = <<20*20=400>> square feet of fabric.
### Answer: 400

Expected answer: 400

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: If each pair of binoculars costs $27 and a store adds a tax of $9 after buying 23 pairs, how much will the total cost be?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The cost of 23 pairs of binoculars is 23 x $27 = $621.
The tax is $9.
The total cost is $621 + $9 = $630.
### Answer: $630

Expected answer: 630

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After paying the tax and buying the 23 pairs of binoculars, the store owner decides to purchase an additional single pair of binoculars that has a discount of $95. What is the total amount the store owner will need to pay now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The total cost after buying the 23 pairs of binoculars is $630.
The cost of an additional pair of binoculars is $27 - $95 = $22.
The total amount the store owner will need to pay is $630 + $22 = $652.
### Answer: $652

Expected answer: 562

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the store owner's last transaction, a new shipment of binoculars came in with a lower price. This time, each pair costs $27 and there's a fixed tax of $9. If the store owner decides to buy 13 pairs from the new shipment, how much would the total cost be now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The cost of 13 pairs of binoculars is 13 x $27 = $351.
The tax is $9.
The total cost is $351 + $9 = $360.
### Answer: $360

Expected answer: 360

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A pirate found 22 gold coins on an island. On his ship, he remembered that he had found 91 gold coins on another island, and 33 gold coins hidden in a chest. How many gold coins does the pirate have in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The pirate found 22 gold coins on the island.
He also found 91 gold coins on another island.
He found 33 gold coins hidden in a chest.
Adding these amounts together, the pirate has 22 + 91 + 33 = 146 gold coins in total.
### Answer: 146

Expected answer: 146

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following on from the previous problem: The pirate made a mistake while counting his treasure. He originally thought that he had found 91 gold coins on another island, but it turned out there were only 9 gold coins. With the 22 coins he found on an island, 9 on another island, and 33 hidden in a chest, how many coins does the pirate have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The pirate found 22 gold coins on the island.
He found 9 gold coins on another island.
He found 33 gold coins hidden in a chest.
Adding these amounts together, the pirate has 22 + 9 + 33 = 64 gold coins initially.
However, the pirate made a mistake and thought he had 91 gold coins on another island, but it was actually 9.
So, subtracting the incorrect amount from the initial total, the pirate has 64 - 91 + 9 = 64 - 82 = -18 gold coins initially.
Adding the 22 coins he found on an island, 9 on another island, and 33 hidden in a chest, the pirate has -18 + 22 + 9 + 33 = 46 gold coins in total.
### Answer: 46

Expected answer: 64

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A magical unicorn has (54 - 24) + 25 numbers of rainbow apples. If each rainbow apple can be traded for 51 sparkly diamonds, how many sparkly diamonds can the unicorn get in return?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: First, let's calculate the number of rainbow apples the unicorn has: (54 - 24) + 25 = 55.
Since each rainbow apple can be traded for 51 sparkly diamonds, the total number of sparkly diamonds the unicorn can get is 55 x 51 = 2805.
### Answer: 2805

Expected answer: 2805

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After trading all of her rainbow apples, the magical unicorn decided to use some of her sparkly diamonds. She gave away 40 diamonds to her unicorn friend and another 12 diamonds to a fairy. How many sparkly diamonds does the unicorn have left?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The unicorn started with 2805 sparkly diamonds.
She gave away 40 diamonds to her unicorn friend, leaving her with 2805 - 40 = 2765 diamonds.
Then, she gave away 12 more diamonds to a fairy, leaving her with 2765 - 12 = 2753 diamonds.
### Answer: 2753

Expected answer: 2753

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of having (54 - 24) + 25 rainbow apples, the magical unicorn actually had (54 - 24) + 38 rainbow apples. If she can still trade each rainbow apple for 51 sparkly diamonds, how many sparkly diamonds would she have received?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: First, let's calculate the number of rainbow apples the unicorn has: (54 - 24) + 38 = 68.
Since each rainbow apple can be traded for 51 sparkly diamonds, the total number of sparkly diamonds the unicorn can get is 68 x 51 = 3468.
### Answer: 3468

Expected answer: 3468

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A phone manufacturer is capable of producing 990 phones every 22 hours. After 33 hours, they add an additional 13 phones to the production batch. How many phones are produced in total at this time?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The phone manufacturer produces 990 phones every 22 hours. To find the number of phones produced in 33 hours, we can divide 33 by 22 and multiply the result by 990.

33 รท 22 = 1.5
1.5 ร— 990 = 1485

So, the phone manufacturer produces 1485 phones in 33 hours. After adding 13 more phones to the production batch, the total number of phones produced is:

1485 + 13 = 1498

### Answer: 1498

Expected answer: 1498

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In our previous scenario, instead of adding 13 phones, suppose the phone manufacturer adds an additional 80 phones after producing phones for 33 hours. How many phones are produced in total at this time now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The phone manufacturer produces 990 phones every 22 hours. To find the number of phones produced in 33 hours, we can divide 33 by 22 and multiply the result by 990.

33 รท 22 = 1.5
1.5 ร— 990 = 1485

So, the phone manufacturer produces 1485 phones in 33 hours. After adding 80 more phones to the production batch, the total number of phones produced is:

1485 + 80 = 1565

### Answer: 1565

Expected answer: 1565

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A tall building has 704 windows in total. If each floor has the same number of windows and the building is 8 floors high, how many windows are there on each floor?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Let's divide the total number of windows (704) by the number of floors (8) to find the number of windows on each floor.

704 รท 8 = 88

So, there are 88 windows on each floor.

### Answer: 88

Expected answer: 88

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After figuring out the total number of windows the maintenance team cleaned in a day, let's consider a different scenario. What if the building had originally been built with 704 windows spread over 71 floors instead of 8? How many windows would there be on each floor then?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Let's divide the total number of windows (704) by the number of floors (71) to find the number of windows on each floor.

704 รท 71 = 10

So, if the building had 71 floors, there would be 10 windows on each floor.

### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 704/71

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: In a small town, each household owns an average of 77 cats. If there are 69 households in the town, how many cats are there in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Since each household owns an average of 77 cats, we can multiply the number of households by the average number of cats per household to find the total number of cats.

69 households x 77 cats/household = 69 x 77 = 5313

### Answer: 5313

Expected answer: 5313

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a small town, each household owns an average of 77 cats. If there are 69 households in the town, there would be a certain number of cats in total. However, due to some circumstances, 91 of these cats had to be moved to another town. How many cats are left in the town now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, there were 69 households x 77 cats/household = 5313 cats in the town.

91 cats were moved to another town, so we subtract 91 from the initial total:

5313 - 91 = 5222

### Answer: 5222

Expected answer: 5222

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A chocolate bar factory has 28 machines running every day. If 2 machines break down and stop producing, how many machines are still producing chocolate bars?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory has 28 machines initially. 2 machines break down, so we subtract 2 from 28 to find the number of machines still producing chocolate bars.
28 - 2 = <<28-2=26>>26 machines are still producing chocolate bars.
### Answer: 26

Expected answer: 26

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Originally, the chocolate bar factory had 87 machines running every day instead of 28. If 2 of the machines break down, as it happened in the previous scenario, how many machines would still be producing chocolate bars?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory has 87 machines initially. 2 machines break down, so we subtract 2 from 87 to find the number of machines still producing chocolate bars.
87 - 2 = <<87-2=85>>85 machines are still producing chocolate bars.
### Answer: 85

Expected answer: 85

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A candlemaker has 37 lavender-scented candles and makes 10 more. He then makes another 24 candles, combines them with the ones he already has, and finally adds 6 vanilla-scented candles to his collection. How many candles does he have in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The candlemaker starts with 37 lavender-scented candles.
He makes 10 more, so he now has 37 + 10 = 47 lavender-scented candles.
He makes 24 more candles, so he now has 47 + 24 = 71 candles.
He adds 6 vanilla-scented candles, so he now has 71 + 6 = 77 candles.
### Answer: 77

Expected answer: 77

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After creating and combining his different candle types, the candlemaker's friend gifted him an additional 7 candles they made. Now, how many candles does the candlemaker have in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The candlemaker already has 77 candles.
His friend gifts him 7 more candles, so he now has 77 + 7 = 84 candles.
### Answer: 84

Expected answer: 84

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: The candlemaker originally thought he had made 6 vanilla-scented candles, but he actually made 8 instead. Given this correction, with everything else the same, how many candles does the candlemaker have in total now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The candlemaker starts with 37 lavender-scented candles.
He makes 10 more, so he now has 37 + 10 = 47 lavender-scented candles.
He makes 24 more candles, so he now has 47 + 24 = 71 candles.
He adds 8 vanilla-scented candles, so he now has 71 + 8 = 79 candles.
### Answer: 79

Expected answer: 79

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: What is the result of adding the numbers 12, 4, and 71 together?

Llama 3 8B:

Let's add the numbers together:

12 + 4 = 16
16 + 71 = 87

So, the result of adding the numbers 12, 4, and 71 together is 87.

### Answer: 87

Expected answer: 87

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After finding the sum of 12, 4, and 71, add 15 to the result. What is the new total?

Llama 3 8B:

We already found the sum of 12, 4, and 71 to be 87. Now, let's add 15 to that result:

87 + 15 = 102

So, the new total is 102.

### Answer: 102

Expected answer: 102

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Imagine that initially instead of 12, you started with 53. Now, what would be the result of adding the numbers 53, 4, and 71 together?

Llama 3 8B:

Let's add the numbers together:

53 + 4 = 57
57 + 71 = 128

So, the result of adding the numbers 53, 4, and 71 together is 128.

### Answer: 128

Expected answer: 128

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: John's cucumber plant produces 59 cucumbers. Mary's cucumber plant, on the other hand, produces as many cucumbers as John's but minus the difference between John's cucumbers and 9. How many cucumbers did Mary's plant produce?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: John's cucumber plant produces 59 cucumbers. Mary's cucumber plant produces the same number as John's minus the difference between John's and 9. The difference between John's and 9 is 59 - 9 = 50. So, Mary's cucumber plant produces 59 - 50 = 9 cucumbers.
### Answer: 9

Expected answer: 9

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous situation, suppose Sarah takes Mary's cucumber count and adds to it the sum of 54 and 3 cucumbers that she already had before. How many cucumbers does Sarah have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Mary's cucumber plant produced 9 cucumbers. Sarah takes Mary's cucumber count and adds to it the sum of 54 and 3 cucumbers that she already had before. So, Sarah has 9 + 54 + 3 = 66 cucumbers now.
### Answer: 66

Expected answer: 66

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following up on the previous situation with John and Mary, suppose now that Mary's cucumber plant produces as many cucumbers as John's but minus the difference between John's cucumbers and 73. How many cucumbers did Mary's plant produce this time?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: John's cucumber plant produces 59 cucumbers. Mary's cucumber plant produces the same number as John's minus the difference between John's and 73. The difference between John's and 73 is 59 - 73 = -14. Since you can't have a negative number of cucumbers, this means Mary's cucumber plant produces 0 cucumbers.
### Answer: 0

Expected answer: 73

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A puzzle game requires 3795 points to complete a level, but a player can only gain points in increments of 69. How many increments are needed to gain the points required to complete the level?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the number of increments needed, we need to divide the total points required (3795) by the increment size (69).

3795 รท 69 = 55

Since we can't gain a fraction of an increment, we round up to the nearest whole number.

55 โ†’ 56

So, the player needs 56 increments to gain the points required to complete the level.

### Answer: 56

Expected answer: 55

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A pirate found a treasure chest with 35 gemstones each worth 57 gold coins. The chest also had an additional 42 gold coins. How many gold coins is the total worth of the treasure chest?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The treasure chest contains 35 gemstones, each worth 57 gold coins. To find the total worth of the gemstones, multiply the number of gemstones by the value of each gemstone: 35 x 57 = 1995.
The treasure chest also has an additional 42 gold coins. To find the total worth of the treasure chest, add the worth of the gemstones to the additional gold coins: 1995 + 42 = 2037.
### Answer: 2037

Expected answer: 2037

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the pirate initially found a smaller chest with only 6 gemstones, each still worth 57 gold coins, along with an additional 42 gold coins. How many gold coins would be the total worth of this smaller chest?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The smaller chest contains 6 gemstones, each worth 57 gold coins. To find the total worth of the gemstones, multiply the number of gemstones by the value of each gemstone: 6 x 57 = 342.
The smaller chest also has an additional 42 gold coins. To find the total worth of the smaller chest, add the worth of the gemstones to the additional gold coins: 342 + 42 = 384.
### Answer: 384

Expected answer: 384

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A pet store has 35 white mice, 86 brown mice, and 39 black mice. How many mice does the store have in total?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store has 35 white mice, 86 brown mice, and 39 black mice.
To find the total number of mice, we add the number of mice of each color: 35 + 86 + 39 = <<35+86+39=160>>160.
### Answer: 160

Expected answer: 160

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: If the pet store decides to double its quantity of each species of mouse โ€“ the white mice, brown mice, and black mice, how many mice will the store have then?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store currently has 35 white mice, 86 brown mice, and 39 black mice.
If the store doubles its quantity of each species of mouse, it will have:
35 x 2 = 70 white mice
86 x 2 = 172 brown mice
39 x 2 = 78 black mice
To find the total number of mice, we add the number of mice of each color: 70 + 172 + 78 = <<70+172+78=320>>320.
### Answer: 320

Expected answer: 320

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: If the pet store actually had 31 black mice instead of 39 black mice along with the 35 white mice and 86 brown mice, how many mice in total would the pet store then have?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The store has 35 white mice, 86 brown mice, and 31 black mice.
To find the total number of mice, we add the number of mice of each color: 35 + 86 + 31 = <<35+86+31=152>>152.
### Answer: 152

Expected answer: 152

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A soap making factory produces 97 bars of soap in one batch. If they made 94 batches in one day, how many bars of soap did they produce that day?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory produces 97 bars of soap in one batch. If they made 94 batches, they produced 94 x 97 = <<94 x 97=9138>>9138 bars of soap that day.
### Answer: 9138

Expected answer: 9118

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A toy factory produces 5 toy cars every minute. After 76 minutes, they add another batch of 49 toy cars. How many toy cars does the factory have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory produces 5 toy cars every minute, so in 76 minutes, they produce 5 x 76 = 380 toy cars.
Adding the new batch of 49 toy cars, the total number of toy cars is 380 + 49 = 429.
### Answer: 429

Expected answer: 429

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing the production data, the toy car factory realized there was a mistake in their calculation. They actually produce only 4 toy cars every minute instead of 5. If they continue to produce for 76 minutes and add another batch of 49 toy cars as before, how many toy cars will the factory have now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The factory produces 4 toy cars every minute, so in 76 minutes, they produce 4 x 76 = 304 toy cars.
Adding the new batch of 49 toy cars, the total number of toy cars is 304 + 49 = 353.
### Answer: 353

Expected answer: 353

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A piece of farmland spans across 9 km. The owner decided to expand his property by 77 km. However, he had to return 71 km due to some legal issues. How many km does the farmer have left after his expansion and subsequent decrease?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farmer started with 9 km of land.
He expanded his property by 77 km, so he now has 9 + 77 = 86 km.
However, he had to return 71 km, so he is left with 86 - 71 = 15 km.
### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a similar situation, another farmer currently owns 25 km of farmland. They also decided to expand by 77 km, but like the previous farmer, had to give back 71 km due to legal issues. How many kilometers does this second farmer have left after this expansion and subsequent decrease?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The farmer started with 25 km of land.
He expanded his property by 77 km, so he now has 25 + 77 = 102 km.
However, he had to return 71 km, so he is left with 102 - 71 = 31 km.
### Answer: 31

Expected answer: 31

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A paint company is preparing 8930 liters of a specific color. If they can fill up a paint bucket with 95 liters of paint, how many buckets will they be able to fill up completely?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To find the number of buckets, we need to divide the total amount of paint (8930 liters) by the capacity of each bucket (95 liters).

8930 liters รท 95 liters/bucket = 93.79 buckets

Since we can't fill a fraction of a bucket, we'll round down to the nearest whole number. Therefore, the paint company will be able to fill up 93 buckets completely.

### Answer: 93

Expected answer: 94

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A bubble machine can make 3654 bubbles with 87 ounces of bubble fluid. How many bubbles can it make with 1 ounce of bubble fluid?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: If the bubble machine can make 3654 bubbles with 87 ounces of bubble fluid, then it can make 3654/87 = 42 bubbles with 1 ounce of bubble fluid.
### Answer: 42

Expected answer: 42

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the bubble machine was actually more efficient and could produce 3654 bubbles with just 47 ounces of bubble fluid. With this rate, how many bubbles can it make with 1 ounce of bubble fluid?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: If the bubble machine can make 3654 bubbles with 47 ounces of bubble fluid, then it can make 3654/47 = 78 bubbles with 1 ounce of bubble fluid.
### Answer: 78

Expected answer: 3654/47

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A juice bar uses 13 apples to make a jug of apple juice. If they made 30 jugs in one day, how many apples did they use?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: To make 1 jug of apple juice, the juice bar uses 13 apples.
To make 30 jugs of apple juice, the juice bar uses 13 x 30 = <<13 x 30=390>>390 apples.
### Answer: 390

Expected answer: 390

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Considering the previous scenario, if instead of using 13 apples daily for the fruit salads, they started using 55 apples, how many apples did they use in total when they made fruit salads for 30 days?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: Initially, the juice bar used 13 apples per day for fruit salads.
For 30 days, they used 13 x 30 = <<13 x 30=390>>390 apples.
Now, they started using 55 apples per day for fruit salads.
For 30 days, they used 55 x 30 = <<55 x 30=1650>>1650 apples.
### Answer: 1650

Expected answer: 1650

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A certain dinosaur species laid eggs every 60 minutes. If they had been laying eggs for 1620 minutes straight, how many total eggs would they have laid?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The dinosaur species lays eggs every 60 minutes, so the number of eggs laid in 1 minute is 1.
The number of eggs laid in 60 minutes is 60.
The number of eggs laid in 1620 minutes is 1620/60 = 27.
### Answer: 27

Expected answer: 27

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the previous scenario, suppose the paleontologists revised their calculations and found that the dinosaur species was actually laying eggs every 47 minutes, not 60 as originally thought. In that case, how many total eggs would the dinosaur have laid if it had been laying eggs for 1620 minutes straight?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The dinosaur species lays eggs every 47 minutes, so the number of eggs laid in 1 minute is 1/47.
The number of eggs laid in 47 minutes is 47.
The number of eggs laid in 1620 minutes is 1620/47 = 34.51 (round up to 35, since you can't lay a fraction of an egg).
### Answer: 35

Expected answer: 1620/47

Correct? No

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: A library received a shipment of new books. There were 55 romance novels, 43 mystery novels, and 67 science fiction novels. How many new books did the library receive?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The library received 55 romance novels, 43 mystery novels, and 67 science fiction novels.
To find the total number of new books, we add the number of romance novels, mystery novels, and science fiction novels: 55 + 43 + 67 = <<55+43+67=165>>165.
### Answer: 165

Expected answer: 165

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the original shipment to the library, suppose there were 95 science fiction novels instead of 67. With the 55 romance novels and 43 mystery novels remaining the same, how many new books did the library receive now?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The library received 55 romance novels, 43 mystery novels, and 95 science fiction novels.
To find the total number of new books, we add the number of romance novels, mystery novels, and science fiction novels: 55 + 43 + 95 = <<55+43+95=193>>193.
### Answer: 193

Expected answer: 193

Correct? Yes

๐Ÿ”— Problem

Problem: On a particular beach, there is a tendency for 74 seashells to appear every day. After 42 days of collection, a beachcomber also discovered an additional 56 seashells that had been hidden in the sand. How many seashells did the beachcomber have in total after 42 days?

Llama 3 8B:

Reasoning: The beachcomber collected 74 seashells per day for 42 days, which is a total of 74 x 42 = 3102 seashells.
Additionally, the beachcomber found 56 seashells that had been hidden in the sand.
The total number of seashells the beachcomber has is 3102 + 56 = 3158.
### Answer: 3158

Expected answer: 3164

Correct? No