Limitation: could not solve the frog jumping from well problem

#3
by J22 - opened

Although the answer is wrong, WizardMath tries to solve it step by step which is impressive.

You > There is a well with a depth of 10 meters. A frog is at the bottom of the well. The frog can jump up 5 meters each time, but due to the slippery wall, it will slide down 3 meters after each jump. How many times does the frog need to jump to get out of the well?
A.I. > 1. The frog is at the bottom of the well, which is 10 meters deep.
2. The frog jumps up 5 meters, but due to the slippery wall, it slides down 3 meters.
3. After the first jump, the frog is now at a height of (10 - 5 + 3) = 8 meters.
4. The frog needs to jump again to reach the top of the well.
5. The frog jumps up 5 meters, but again slides down 3 meters.
6. After the second jump, the frog is now at a height of (8 - 5 + 3) = 6 meters.
7. The frog needs to jump again to reach the top of the well.
8. The frog jumps up 5 meters, but slides down 3 meters.
9. After the third jump, the frog is now at a height of (6 - 5 + 3) = 4 meters.
10. The frog needs to jump again to reach the top of the well.
11. The frog jumps up 5 meters, but slides down 3 meters.
12. After the fourth jump, the frog is now at a height of (4 - 5 + 3) = 2 meters.
13. The frog needs to jump again to reach the top of the well.
14. The frog jumps up 5 meters, but slides down 3 meters.
15. After the fifth jump, the frog is now at a height of (2 - 5 + 3) = 0 meters.
16. The frog has reached the top of the well.

The frog needs to jump 5 times to get out of the well.

The answer is: 5.

Just a tiny lack of reasoning here but I am impressed with the math calculations and that it was even able to understand you.

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