| 模型 | 模型答案 | 正确答案 |
|---|---|---|
| 金声玉亮2.0 | Let's analyze the given premises step by step: 1. The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. This means one is in an odd position (1 or 3) and the other is in an even position (2). 2. The person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. This implies that the police-officer cannot be at either end of the line since they must be between two people with specific attributes. 3. The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or the person who likes skydiving is a videographer or both. This gives us two possibilities for the skydiving hobbyist. 4. The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. This means the woodworking hobbyist cannot be first if the videographer is second or third. 5. The person who likes skydiving is not anywhere to the right of the person who likes board-games. This means the skydiving hobbyist cannot be third if the board-games enthusiast is first or second. 6. The person that travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. Similar to premise 1, this means one is in an odd position and the other is in an even position. From premise 2, we know the police-officer cannot be at either end, so they must be in position 2. From premise 1 and 6, we can deduce that the person who travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games must occupy positions 1 and 3, respectively, because they have different parity positions and cannot be next to each other. Since the police-officer is in position 2, the person who drinks milk cannot be in position 2 due to premise 2. Therefore, the person who drinks milk must be in position 1 or 3. But since the person who travels by airplane is also in position 1 or 3, and they cannot be the same person, the person who drinks milk and the person who travels by airplane must occupy positions 1 and 3, respectively. Now, let's consider the transport options. We already placed the airplane in position 1 or 3, and since the police-officer is in position 2, they must use either a snowmobile or a tram. However, from premise 3, the skydiving hobbyist either uses a tram or is a videographer. Since the videographer cannot be to the left of the woodworking hobbyist (premise 4), and the skydiving hobbyist cannot be to the right of the board-games enthusiast (premise 5), we need to place these attributes carefully. If the police-officer uses a tram, then the skydiving hobbyist cannot also use a tram unless they are the police-officer, which contradicts our placement of the police-officer in position 2. Therefore, the police-officer must use the snowmobile, and the skydiving hobbyist must be the videographer. Given all this information, the only remaining transport option for the person in position 1 or 3 is the tram. Since the person who travels by airplane cannot be the police-officer, they must be the person who drinks milk, and the person who drinks sprite must be the one in position 2, using the snowmobile. To summarize: - Position 1: Airplane, Milk - Position 2: Snowmobile, Sprite, Police-officer - Position 3: Tram Since the police-officer is in position 2 and uses the snowmobile, the person that travels by snowmobile has the job of a police-officer. Therefore, the answer is: ***police-officer***. |
police-officer |
| deepseek-r1 | ***police-officer*** |
police-officer |
| gpto1 | ***police-officer*** | police-officer |
| gpt-4o-2024-08-06 | To solve this puzzle, we need to determine the attributes of each person based on the given premises. Let's analyze the information step by step: 1. **Parity Positions:** - The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. This means one is in an odd position (1 or 3) and the other is in an even position (2). - The person that travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. This also means one is in an odd position and the other is in an even position. 2. **Order Constraints:** - The person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. This implies the airplane and milk positions are not adjacent, and the police-officer is in the middle. 3. **Hobby and Job Constraints:** - The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or is a videographer or both. - The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. - The person who likes skydiving is not anywhere to the right of the person who likes board-games. Let's try to deduce the positions: - Since the airplane and sprite must be on different parities, and airplane and board-games must also be on different parities, sprite and board-games must be on the same parity. Therefore, sprite and board-games are either both odd or both even. - The police-officer is between airplane and milk. This means airplane and milk are not adjacent, and police-officer is in the middle. - The person who likes skydiving is not to the right of the person who likes board-games, so skydiving is either to the left or the same position as board-games. - The videographer is not to the left of woodworking, so videographer is either the same position or to the right of woodworking. Let's assume: - Position 1: Airplane - Position 2: Police-officer - Position 3: Milk This satisfies the condition that the police-officer is between airplane and milk. Now, let's assign the hobbies: - If position 1 is airplane, it cannot be board-games (different parity), so it must be skydiving or woodworking. - If position 3 is milk, it cannot be skydiving (not to the right of board-games), so it must be board-games or woodworking. Let's try: - Position 1: Airplane, Skydiving - Position 2: Police-officer, Woodworking - Position 3: Milk, Board-games This satisfies: - Skydiving is not to the right of board-games. - Videographer is not to the left of woodworking (since position 2 is woodworking, videographer can be position 2 or 3). Now, let's assign the transport: - Position 1: Airplane - Position 2: Tram (since skydiving can be tram or videographer) - Position 3: Snowmobile Finally, let's assign the jobs: - Position 1: Airplane, Skydiving, Videographer - Position 2: Tram, Police-officer, Woodworking - Position 3: Snowmobile, Board-games, Bartender The person that travels by snowmobile is in position 3 and has the job of a bartender. Therefore, the answer is: ***bartender*** |
police-officer |
| DeepSeek-Coder-V2-Lite-Instruct | To solve this problem, we need to determine the attributes of each person and then use these attributes to deduce the job of the person who travels by snowmobile. Let's go through the premises step-by-step and use logical reasoning to find the solution. 1. **Premise 1**: The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. - This means if the person with airplane travels by tram, the person with sprite must travel by snowmobile or milk. - If the person with airplane travels by snowmobile, the person with sprite must travel by tram or milk. 2. **Premise 2**: The person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. - This means the person with police-officer is either between the person with airplane and the person with milk or next to one of them. 3. **Premise 3**: The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or the person who likes skydiving is a videographer or both. - This means the person with skydiving can either travel by tram or be a videographer. 4. **Premise 4**: The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. - This means the person with videographer cannot be to the left of the person with woodworking. 5. **Premise 5**: The person who likes skydiving is not anywhere to the right of the person who likes board-games. - This means the person with skydiving cannot be to the right of the person with board-games. 6. **Premise 6**: The person that travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. - This means if the person with airplane travels by tram, the person with board-games must travel by snowmobile or milk. - If the person with airplane travels by snowmobile, the person with board-games must travel by tram or milk. Let's start by assigning possible values to each person based on the premises: - **Person 1**: Travels by airplane, drinks sprite. - **Person 2**: Travels by tram, likes skydiving. - **Person 3**: Travels by snowmobile, likes woodworking. Now, let's verify the assignments: - **Premise 1**: Person 1 (airplane) and Person 2 (sprite) have different parity positions. This is true since Person 1 is at position 1 and Person 2 is at position 2. - **Premise 2**: Person 1 (airplane) and Person 3 (milk) are not adjacent, but Person 2 (tram) is between them. This is true. - **Premise 3**: Person 2 (skydiving) travels by tram. This is true. - **Premise 4**: Person 3 (videographer) is not to the left of Person 2 (woodworking). This is true since Person 3 is to the right of Person 2. - **Premise 5**: Person 2 (skydiving) is not to the right of Person 3 (board-games). This is true since Person 2 is to the left of Person 3. - **Premise 6**: Person 1 (airplane) and Person 3 (board-games) have different parity positions. This is true since Person 1 is at position 1 and Person 3 is at position 3. Now, we need to determine the job of the person who travels by snowmobile. From the assignments, we know Person 3 travels by snowmobile and likes woodworking. We need to find a job that fits this description. Given the possible jobs: - **Police-officer**: This person does not fit the description of traveling by snowmobile. - **Bartender**: This person does not fit the description of traveling by snowmobile. - **Videographer**: This person does not fit the description of traveling by snowmobile. The only job that fits the description of traveling by snowmobile and having woodworking as a hobby is **Bartender**. Therefore, the job of the person who travels by snowmobile is: ***Bartender*** |
police-officer |
| Meta-Llama-3.1-405B-Instruct-Turbo | ## Step 1: Determine the possible positions for the person who travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite. Given that the person who travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions, and considering the line has 3 people (positions 1, 2, and 3), the person who travels by airplane can be in either position 1 or 3 (odd positions), while the person who drinks sprite must then be in one of the remaining positions, but since position 2 is the only even position, the sprite drinker can only be in position 2 if the airplane traveler is in 1 or 3. ## Step 2: Determine the possible positions for the person who is a police-officer. The police-officer must be between the person who travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. Given the airplane traveler can only be in positions 1 or 3, and there are only three positions, the police-officer must be in position 2 if the airplane traveler is in 1 and the milk drinker is in 3, or the police-officer could be in position 1 or 2 if the airplane traveler is in 3 and the milk drinker is in 1 or 2, respectively. ## Step 3: Analyze the hobby and transport connections. The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or is a videographer or both. This means the skydiving enthusiast cannot travel by airplane or snowmobile unless they are also a videographer. ## Step 4: Determine the possible positions for the person who likes skydiving and the person who likes board-games. The person who likes skydiving cannot be to the right of the person who likes board-games, and since the airplane traveler and the board-games enthusiast have different parity positions, the board-games enthusiast must be in position 2 if the airplane traveler is in 1 or 3. ## Step 5: Combine the information to narrow down possibilities. Considering the restrictions, if the airplane traveler is in position 1, the sprite drinker (who must be in an even position) and the board-games enthusiast (who cannot be in the same parity as the airplane traveler) create a conflict for position 2. Thus, the airplane traveler must be in position 3. This places the police-officer in position 2 (as the milk drinker cannot be in 2 since the police must be between airplane and milk, and airplane is in 3). ## Step 6: Determine the job of the person who travels by snowmobile. Given the police-officer is in position 2, and the airplane traveler is in position 3, the person who travels by snowmobile must be in position 1. The person in position 1 cannot be a police-officer (already in position 2) or a videographer (since the videographer cannot be to the left of the woodworking enthusiast, and there's no room to the right for the woodworking enthusiast given the other constraints). Therefore, the person who travels by snowmobile must be a bartender, as it's the only job left that fits the constraints. The final answer is: $\boxed{bartender}$ |
police-officer |
| Meta-Llama-3.1-70B-Instruct-Turbo | ## Step 1: Determine the possible positions for the person who travels by airplane. Given that the person who travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions, the person who travels by airplane can be in either position 1 or 3. ## Step 2: Determine the possible positions for the person who drinks milk. Since the person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk, and considering the possible positions for the person who travels by airplane, the person who drinks milk must be in position 3 if the airplane traveler is in position 1, or in position 1 if the airplane traveler is in position 3. ## Step 3: Analyze the hobby of skydiving and its possible connections to transport and job. The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or is a videographer or both. This means the person who likes skydiving cannot travel by airplane, as that would leave no option for the person who travels by airplane to be in a different parity position than the person who drinks sprite, given the constraints. ## Step 4: Determine the possible positions for the person who likes skydiving. Given that the person who likes skydiving is not anywhere to the right of the person who likes board-games, and considering the parity constraints related to the airplane traveler and the board-games enthusiast, the person who likes skydiving must be in position 1 or 2. ## Step 5: Analyze the job of the videographer in relation to woodworking. The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. This means if the videographer is in position 2, the woodworking enthusiast must be in position 3, or if the videographer is in position 3, the woodworking enthusiast can be in either position 2 or 3, but given other constraints, it's more likely the videographer is in position 3. ## Step 6: Combine the information to determine the job of the person who travels by snowmobile. Considering the constraints: - The airplane traveler cannot be in the same parity position as the sprite drinker. - The police-officer is between the airplane traveler and the milk drinker. - The skydiving enthusiast travels by tram or is a videographer or both, and is not to the right of the board-games enthusiast. - The videographer is not to the left of the woodworking enthusiast. Given these constraints and the process of elimination, the person who travels by snowmobile is likely to be the police-officer, as this fits with the given constraints without violating any of them. The final answer is: ***police-officer*** |
police-officer |
| Qwen2-72B-Instruct | Let's analyze the given premises step by step: 1. The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. This means one is in an odd position (1 or 3) and the other is in an even position (2). 2. The person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. This implies that the police-officer cannot be at either end of the line since they must be between two people with specific attributes. 3. The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or the person who likes skydiving is a videographer or both. This gives us two possibilities for the skydiving hobbyist. 4. The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. This means the woodworking hobbyist cannot be first if the videographer is second or third. 5. The person who likes skydiving is not anywhere to the right of the person who likes board-games. This means the skydiving hobbyist cannot be third if the board-games enthusiast is first or second. 6. The person that travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. Similar to premise 1, this means one is in an odd position and the other is in an even position. From premise 2, we know the police-officer cannot be at either end, so they must be in position 2. From premise 1 and 6, we can deduce that the person who travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games must occupy positions 1 and 3, respectively, because they have different parity positions and cannot be next to each other. Since the police-officer is in position 2, the person who drinks milk cannot be in position 2 due to premise 2. Therefore, the person who drinks milk must be in position 1 or 3. But since the person who travels by airplane is also in position 1 or 3, and they cannot be the same person, the person who drinks milk and the person who travels by airplane must occupy positions 1 and 3, respectively. Now, let's consider the transport options. We already placed the airplane in position 1 or 3, and since the police-officer is in position 2, they must use either a snowmobile or a tram. However, from premise 3, the skydiving hobbyist either uses a tram or is a videographer. Since the videographer cannot be to the left of the woodworking hobbyist (premise 4), and the skydiving hobbyist cannot be to the right of the board-games enthusiast (premise 5), we need to place these attributes carefully. If the police-officer uses a tram, then the skydiving hobbyist cannot also use a tram unless they are the police-officer, which contradicts our placement of the police-officer in position 2. Therefore, the police-officer must use the snowmobile, and the skydiving hobbyist must be the videographer. Given all this information, the only remaining transport option for the person in position 1 or 3 is the tram. Since the person who travels by airplane cannot be the police-officer, they must be the person who drinks milk, and the person who drinks sprite must be the one in position 2, using the snowmobile. To summarize: - Position 1: Airplane, Milk - Position 2: Snowmobile, Sprite, Police-officer - Position 3: Tram Since the police-officer is in position 2 and uses the snowmobile, the person that travels by snowmobile has the job of a police-officer. Therefore, the answer is: ***police-officer***. |
police-officer |
| baichuan4 | To solve this puzzle, we can use logical deduction to narrow down the possibilities for each person's attributes based on the given premises. Let's go through each premise step by step: 1. The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. This means they cannot be in the same position (1, 3) or (3, 1). 2. The person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. This sets a specific order for these three attributes. 3. The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or the person who likes skydiving is a videographer or both. This gives us multiple possibilities for the person who likes skydiving. 4. The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. This gives us a constraint on the position of the videographer and the person who likes woodworking. 5. The person who likes skydiving is not anywhere to the right of the person who likes board-games. This gives us another constraint on the position of the person who likes skydiving and the person who likes board-games. 6. The person that travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. This means they cannot be in the same position (1, 3) or (3, 1). Now, let's start filling in the information based on these deductions: - Person 1: Transport = snowmobile - Person 2: Job = police-officer (from premise 2) - Person 3: Beverage = milk (from premise 2) Now, let's consider the remaining attributes: - The person who drinks sprite cannot be in the same position as the person who travels by airplane, so they must be in positions 1 or 3. But since the person who drinks milk is in position 3, the person who drinks sprite must be in position 1. Therefore, the person in position 1 also drinks sprite. - The person who likes skydiving cannot be to the right of the person who likes board-games, so they must be in positions 1 or 2. - The person who is a videographer cannot be to the left of the person who likes woodworking, so they must be in positions 2 or 3. Based on these deductions, we can create a table to represent the possible combinations: ``` Position | Transport | Hobby | Job | Beverage ---------------------------------------------------- 1 | snowmobile| skydiving | ? | sprite 2 | airplane | woodworking| police-officer | ? 3 | tram | board-games | ? | milk ``` Now, let's consider the remaining premises: - The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or is a videographer or both. Since the person in position 1 likes skydiving and travels by snowmobile, they cannot be the person who likes skydiving and travels by tram. Therefore, the person in position 3 must like skydiving and travel by tram. - The person who is a videographer cannot be to the left of the person who likes woodworking. Since the person in position 2 likes woodworking, the person in position 3 cannot be a videographer. Therefore, the person in position 1 must be a videographer. Now, we have enough information to fill in the rest of the table: ``` Position | Transport | Hobby | Job | Beverage ---------------------------------------------------- 1 | snowmobile| skydiving | videographer | sprite 2 | airplane | woodworking| police-officer | ? 3 | tram | board-games | ? | milk ``` The only remaining unknown is the job of the person who travels by snowmobile. Since we already determined that the person in position 1 is a videographer, we can conclude that the person who travels by snowmobile is a videographer. Answer: ***videographer*** |
police-officer |
| doubao | ***bartender*** | police-officer |
| gpto1 | ***police-officer*** | police-officer |
| kimi | Let's analyze the premises step by step to deduce the attributes of each person in the line. 1. The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. - This means that if one is in an odd position (1 or 3), the other is in an even position (2). 2. The person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. - This means that the police-officer is not at the ends of the line. 3. The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or the person who likes skydiving is a videographer or both. - This means that if someone likes skydiving, they either travel by tram or are a videographer. 4. The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. - This means that if someone is a videographer, they are to the right of the person who likes woodworking. 5. The person who likes skydiving is not anywhere to the right of the person who likes board-games. - This means that if someone likes skydiving, they are to the left of the person who likes board-games. 6. The person that travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. - This means that if one is in an odd position (1 or 3), the other is in an even position (2). Now, let's assign the attributes to each person: - Since the person who drinks milk must be between the person who travels by airplane and the police-officer, and considering the parity positions, the person who drinks milk must be in position 2. - The person who travels by airplane must be in position 1 or 3, but since the person who drinks milk is in position 2, the person who travels by airplane must be in position 3. - The person who drinks sprite must be in position 1 or 2, but since the person who travels by airplane is in position 3, the person who drinks sprite must be in position 1. - The person who is a police-officer must be in position 2, as they are between the person who travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. - The person who likes skydiving must travel by tram or be a videographer. Since the person who travels by tram is not to the left of the person who likes woodworking, and the person who likes skydiving cannot be to the right of the person who likes board-games, the person who likes skydiving must be in position 1 or 3. But since the person who likes skydiving cannot be to the right of the person who likes board-games, and the person who likes board-games must be in position 2 (as they are to the right of the person who likes skydiving), the person who likes skydiving must be in position 1. - The person who is a videographer cannot be to the left of the person who likes woodworking. Since the person who likes woodworking must be in position 2 (as they are to the right of the person who likes skydiving), the person who is a videographer must be in position 3. - The person who travels by snowmobile must be in position 2, as it is the only position left. Now we have: - Position 1: Person who travels by airplane, drinks sprite, likes skydiving, and is a videographer. - Position 2: Person who drinks milk, is a police-officer, and travels by snowmobile. - Position 3: Person who likes board-games and travels by tram. Since the person who travels by snowmobile is in position 2 and is a police-officer, the answer is: ***police-officer*** |
police-officer |
| minimax | Let's analyze the information given step by step: 1. The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. - This means if the person who travels by airplane is in an even position (2nd), the person who drinks sprite is in an odd position (1st or 3rd), and vice versa. 2. The person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. - This means the police officer cannot be in the first or last position, and the person who travels by airplane cannot be in the last position if the person who drinks milk is in the first position, and vice versa. 3. The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or the person who likes skydiving is a videographer or both. - This means the person who likes skydiving could either travel by tram, be a videographer, or both. 4. The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. - This means the videographer must be in position 2 or 3 if the person who likes woodworking is in position 1, or in position 3 if the person who likes woodworking is |
police-officer |
| wenxinyiyan | To solve this logic puzzle, we need to analyze the given premises and determine the job of the person who travels by snowmobile. Let's start by listing the key information and then reasoning through the steps. **Key Information**: 1. There are three people standing in a line numbered 1 through 3 (left to right). 2. Each person has a unique combination of attributes: Transport, Hobby, Job, Beverage. 3. The possible values for each attribute are listed, and exactly one person has a given value for an attribute. **Premises**: 1. The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. 2. The person who is a police-officer is between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. 3. The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or is a videographer or both. 4. The person who is a videographer is not left of the person who likes woodworking. 5. The person who likes skydiving is not right of the person who likes board-games. 6. The person that travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. **Reasoning**: * From premise 1, we know that the person traveling by airplane and the person drinking sprite must be in different parity positions (i.e., one is in an odd-numbered position, and the other is in an even-numbered position). Since there are only three positions, this means one is in position 1 or 3, and the other is in position 2. * From premise 2, the police-officer is between the person traveling by airplane and the person drinking milk. This implies that the police-officer must be in position 2, as they are between two other people. * Since the police-officer is in position 2, the person drinking sprite cannot be in position 2 (from premise 1). Therefore, the person drinking sprite must be in position 1 or 3, and the person traveling by airplane must be in the remaining position (either 1 or 3). * From premise 3, the person who likes skydiving travels by tram or is a videographer. Since the police-officer is in position 2, and we know the police-officer's transport is not tram (as they are not the person traveling by airplane), the person in position 2 does not like skydiving. * From premise 5, the person who likes skydiving cannot be right of the person who likes board-games. This means the person who likes board-games must be in position 2 or 3, and the person who likes skydiving must be in position 1 or 2 (respectively). Since we know the person in position 2 does not like skydiving, the person in position 1 likes skydiving, and the person in position 3 likes board-games. * From premise 4, the videographer cannot be left of the person who likes woodworking. Since the person in position 1 likes skydiving, they cannot be the videographer (as they would be left of someone who likes woodworking, violating the premise). The person in position 2 is the police-officer, so they are not the videographer. Therefore, the person in position 3 must be the videographer. * Since the person in position 3 likes board-games and is the videographer, from premise 6, we know they cannot travel by airplane (as the person traveling by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions). Therefore, the person in position 1 travels by airplane. * The person in position 2 is the police-officer and does not travel by airplane or tram (as the person in position 1 travels by airplane, and we know the police-officer's transport is not tram). Therefore, the person in position 2 travels by snowmobile. **Conclusion**: The person that travels by snowmobile is the police-officer, located in position 2. **Answer**: ***police-officer*** |
police-officer |
| zhipu | To solve this puzzle, we need to use the given premises to deduce the positions and attributes of each person in the line. Let's analyze the premises step by step: 1. **Premise 1**: The person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks sprite have different parity positions. - This means if one is in an odd position (1 or 3), the other must be in an even position (2). 2. **Premise 2**: The person who is a police-officer is somewhere between the person that travels by airplane and the person who drinks milk. - This implies the police-officer is not at the extreme positions (1 or 3) but in the middle (2). 3. **Premise 3**: The person who likes skydiving travels by tram or the person who likes skydiving is a videographer or both. - This gives us two possibilities for the skydiver: they either travel by tram or are a videographer. 4. **Premise 4**: The person who is a videographer is not anywhere to the left of the person who likes woodworking. - This means the videographer is either in the same position as the woodworking person or to the right of them. 5. **Premise 5**: The person who likes skydiving is not anywhere to the right of the person who likes board-games. - This means the skydiver is either in the same position as the board-games person or to the left of them. 6. **Premise 6**: The person that travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. - This means if one is in an odd position (1 or 3), the other must be in an even position (2). Let's start by placing the police-officer in position 2 (based on Premise 2). - **Position 2**: Police-officer Now, let's consider the person who travels by airplane. Based on Premise 1, they must have a different parity position from the person who drinks sprite. Since the police-officer is in position 2, the person who travels by airplane cannot be in position 2. They must be in either position 1 or 3. Next, consider Premise 6: the person who travels by airplane and the person who likes board-games have different parity positions. If the person who travels by airplane is in position 1 (odd), then the person who likes board-games must be in position 2 or 3 (even). If the person who travels by airplane is in position 3 (odd), then the person who likes board-games must be in position 1 or 2 (even). Let's assume the person who travels by airplane is in position 1 (this will be checked against all premises): - **Position 1**: Airplane Now, the person who drinks sprite must be in position 2 or 3 (even), but since position 2 is already occupied by the police-officer, the person who drinks sprite must be in position 3. - **Position 3**: Sprite Next, the person who drinks milk must be in position 1 or 2. Since position 1 is occupied by the person who travels by airplane, the person who drinks milk must be in position 2. But position 2 is already occupied by the police-officer, so this assumption is incorrect. Let's try the other possibility: - **Position 3**: Airplane Now, the person who drinks sprite must be in position 1 or 2 (even). Since position 2 is occupied by the police-officer, the person who drinks sprite must be in position 1. - **Position 1**: Sprite - **Position 3**: Airplane Now, the person who drinks milk must be in position 2. - **Position 2**: Police-officer, Milk Next, consider Premise 3: the person who likes skydiving travels by tram or is a videographer. Since the person who travels by airplane is in position 3, the person who likes skydiving cannot be in position 3 unless they are a videographer. Consider Premise 4: the videographer is not to the left of the person who likes woodworking. Since the police-officer is in position 2 and drinks milk, the videographer must be in position 3 or the same position as woodworking. Consider Premise 5: the person who likes skydiving is not to the right of the person who likes board-games. This means the skydiver must be in position 1 or the same position as board-games. Let's place the skydiver in position 1 (since they can travel by tram): - **Position 1**: Sprite, Skydiving, Tram Now, the person who likes board-games must be in position 2 or 3. Since the person who travels by airplane is in position 3 and has different parity from board-games, the person who likes board-games must be in position 2. - **Position 2**: Police-officer, Milk, Board-games Finally, the person who likes woodworking must be in position 3. - **Position 3**: Airplane, Woodworking Now, the only remaining transport is snowmobile, which must be in position 2. Since position 2 is already occupied by the police-officer, the person who travels by snowmobile must be the police-officer. Thus, the job of the person who travels by snowmobile is: ***police-officer*** |
police-officer |
| deepseek-v3 | Error code: 400 - {'error': {'code': 'RequestTimeOut', 'param': None, 'message': 'Request timed out, please try again later.', 'type': 'RequestTimeOut'}, 'id': 'chatcmpl-5b8e98fa-f05a-9884-b278-f9bd14ff5cad', 'request_id': '5b8e98fa-f05a-9884-b278-f9bd14ff5cad'} | police-officer |