Question

This table shows the number of cookies produced for each cup of sugar used in the recipe for cookie a

cookie a - cookies per cup of sugar
cups
2
3
4
cookies
80
120
160

An illustration shows Quadrant 1 of a coordinate plane. The x-axis is labeled Cups and ranges from 0 to 6 in one unit increments. The y-axis is labeled Cookies and ranges from 0 to 192 in 12 unit increments. The graph is titled Cookies per Cup of Sugar. A line connects six points plotted on the graph. The coordinates of the plotted points are left parenthesis 0 comma 0 right parenthesis, left parenthesis 1 comma 36 right parenthesis, left parenthesis 2 comma 72 right parenthesis, left parenthesis 3 comma 108 right parenthesis, left parenthesis 4 comma 144 right parenthesis, and left parenthesis 5 comma 180 right parenthesis. An upward arrow points to 1 on the x-axis.

The yields of cookies per cup of sugar for Cookie A and Cookie B are displayed in the table and the graph. Find the cookie that yields the most cookies from one cup of sugar. How many cookies does Cookie A and Cookie B make from one cup of sugar?

Cookie B makes more cookies than Cookie A. Cookie B makes 40 cookies, and Cookie A makes 36 cookies from one cup of sugar. Cookie A makes more cookies than Cookie B from one cup of sugar. Cookie A makes 80 cookies, and Cookie B makes 36 cookies from one cup of sugar. Cookie A makes more cookies than Cookie B from one cup of sugar. Cookie A makes 40 cookies, and Cookie B makes 36 cookies from one cup of sugar. Cookie B makes more cookies than Cookie A. Cookie B makes 72 cookies, and Cookie A makes 40 cookies.

Answers

GPT-4o mini
Let's summarize the information provided:

From the data for Cookie A:
- When 1 cup of sugar is used, Cookie A makes 36 cookies.
- When 2 cups of sugar are used, Cookie A makes 72 cookies.
- When 3 cups of sugar are used, Cookie A makes 108 cookies.
- When 4 cups of sugar are used, Cookie A makes 144 cookies.
- When 5 cups of sugar are used, Cookie A makes 180 cookies.

For Cookie B, we don't have as much detail, but several comparisons are made:

**Comparisons:**
1. Cookie B makes 40 cookies, and Cookie A makes 36 cookies from 1 cup of sugar.
2. Cookie A makes 80 cookies, and Cookie B makes 36 cookies from 1 cup of sugar.
3. Cookie A makes 40 cookies, and Cookie B makes 36 cookies from 1 cup of sugar.
4. Cookie B makes 72 cookies, and Cookie A makes 40 cookies.

Upon analyzing the comparisons:
- From the information where Cookie A makes 36 cookies from 1 cup, and Cookie B makes 40 cookies, Cookie B yields more.
- Cookie A yields 80 cookies (but that seems to be when 2 cups are used) versus Cookie B making 36 cookies (possibly from 1 cup).
- Cookie A (40 cookies) versus Cookie B (36 cookies) shows A yields more.
- Cookie B (72 cookies) against Cookie A (40 cookies) shows B yields more.

### Conclusion:
To directly answer the question asked:
- **From 1 cup of sugar**: Cookie A makes **36 cookies**, and in the context of comparisons, Cookie B typically has amounts that varies but can be notably higher with some cases (like when Cookie B makes 72 cookies).

Ultimately, **if we look strictly at one cup**, from the given data, the comparisons suggest that Cookie A makes **36 cookies** and comparisons vary for Cookie B depending on other factors.

Thus:
- **Cookie A = 36 cookies from 1 cup of sugar**
- **Cookie B = 40 or some other value depending on context but shows variability.**

Cookie B consistently shows higher yields depending on the context compared. So it's clear that Cookie A has a consistent measure while Cookie B has more variability in claims. If asking which yields more per defined cup, it seems more accurate to present both statements depending on confirmed data over that interpreted circumstances.