[
  {
    "Question": "In a data sufficiency question, what does it mean if Statement (1) alone is sufficient to answer the question, but Statement (2) alone is not?",
    "Answer": "A",
    "Explanation": "If Statement (1) alone provides enough information to answer the question, but Statement (2) alone does not, then the correct choice is that only Statement (1) is sufficient.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Only Statement (1) is sufficient to answer the question.",
    "OptionB": "Only Statement (2) is sufficient to answer the question.",
    "OptionC": "Both statements together are needed to answer the question.",
    "OptionD": "Neither statement is sufficient to answer the question.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 1,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "What is the primary goal when answering a data sufficiency question?",
    "Answer": "C",
    "Explanation": "The goal is to determine whether the given statements provide enough information to answer the question, not to solve the problem itself.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "To find the exact numerical answer to the question.",
    "OptionB": "To guess the most likely answer based on the statements.",
    "OptionC": "To decide if the statements provide enough information to answer the question.",
    "OptionD": "To combine the statements and calculate a final result.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 2,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "If both Statement (1) and Statement (2) alone are sufficient to answer a data sufficiency question, what is the correct answer choice?",
    "Answer": "B",
    "Explanation": "When each statement alone is sufficient, the answer choice indicating that either statement alone suffices is correct.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Only Statement (1) is sufficient.",
    "OptionB": "Either Statement (1) or Statement (2) alone is sufficient.",
    "OptionC": "Both statements together are needed.",
    "OptionD": "Neither statement is sufficient.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 3,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "In data sufficiency, what does it imply if combining Statements (1) and (2) is necessary to answer the question, but neither alone is sufficient?",
    "Answer": "C",
    "Explanation": "If neither statement alone suffices but together they do, the correct answer is that both statements together are sufficient.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Only Statement (1) is sufficient.",
    "OptionB": "Only Statement (2) is sufficient.",
    "OptionC": "Both statements together are sufficient, but neither alone is sufficient.",
    "OptionD": "Neither statement is sufficient, even together.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 4,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "Which of the following best describes the typical structure of a data sufficiency question?",
    "Answer": "D",
    "Explanation": "Data sufficiency questions present a question followed by two statements. The task is to determine if the statements provide enough information to answer the question.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "A question with multiple answer choices to select from.",
    "OptionB": "A problem requiring calculation using given data.",
    "OptionC": "A question with one statement to evaluate.",
    "OptionD": "A question followed by two statements to evaluate for sufficiency.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 5,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "In data sufficiency, what does the answer choice 'D' usually represent?",
    "Answer": "D",
    "Explanation": "Answer choice 'D' typically means that both statements together are sufficient to answer the question, but neither alone is sufficient.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Only Statement (1) is sufficient.",
    "OptionB": "Only Statement (2) is sufficient.",
    "OptionC": "Either statement alone is sufficient.",
    "OptionD": "Both statements together are sufficient, but neither alone is sufficient.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 6,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "If neither Statement (1) nor Statement (2) alone or together provide enough information to answer the question, which answer choice is correct?",
    "Answer": "E",
    "Explanation": "If the information given is insufficient even when both statements are combined, the correct answer is that the statements are insufficient.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Only Statement (1) is sufficient.",
    "OptionB": "Only Statement (2) is sufficient.",
    "OptionC": "Either statement alone is sufficient.",
    "OptionD": "Both statements together are sufficient.",
    "OptionE": "Statements (1) and (2) together are not sufficient.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 7,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "Why is it important not to actually solve the problem in a data sufficiency question?",
    "Answer": "B",
    "Explanation": "The focus is on determining whether the statements provide enough information, not on finding the exact answer. This saves time and helps identify sufficiency quickly.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Because the problem is too difficult to solve.",
    "OptionB": "Because the goal is to assess sufficiency, not to compute the answer.",
    "OptionC": "Because the answer is always given in the statements.",
    "OptionD": "Because solving the problem is impossible without both statements.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 8,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "In data sufficiency, if Statement (1) gives a specific value for a variable and Statement (2) gives a formula involving the variable, what should you consider first?",
    "Answer": "A",
    "Explanation": "Check if Statement (1) alone is sufficient by itself. If it provides the exact value needed, then Statement (2) may not be necessary.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Whether Statement (1) alone answers the question.",
    "OptionB": "Whether Statement (2) alone answers the question.",
    "OptionC": "If both statements contradict each other.",
    "OptionD": "If the formula in Statement (2) can be simplified.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 9,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "Which strategy is most effective when evaluating data sufficiency statements?",
    "Answer": "C",
    "Explanation": "Evaluate each statement independently first, then consider them together if needed. This approach helps avoid unnecessary calculations.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Solve the problem using both statements immediately.",
    "OptionB": "Ignore one statement and focus on the other.",
    "OptionC": "Assess each statement alone before combining them.",
    "OptionD": "Guess based on intuition without analysis.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 10,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "What does it mean if a data sufficiency question asks, 'Is x > 10?' and Statement (1) says 'x = 15'?",
    "Answer": "A",
    "Explanation": "Since Statement (1) gives the exact value of x, it is sufficient to answer whether x is greater than 10.",
    "PictureURL": "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Greater_than_symbol.svg/120px-Greater_than_symbol.svg.png",
    "OptionA": "Statement (1) alone is sufficient.",
    "OptionB": "Statement (1) alone is not sufficient.",
    "OptionC": "Both statements together are needed.",
    "OptionD": "Neither statement is sufficient.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 11,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "If Statement (1) says 'x + y = 10' and Statement (2) says 'x = 6', can you find the value of y?",
    "Answer": "D",
    "Explanation": "Statement (1) alone is not sufficient because x and y can vary. Statement (2) alone is not sufficient because y is unknown. Together, they allow calculation of y = 4.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Only Statement (1) is sufficient.",
    "OptionB": "Only Statement (2) is sufficient.",
    "OptionC": "Either statement alone is sufficient.",
    "OptionD": "Both statements together are sufficient.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 12,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "Which of the following is NOT a valid answer choice in typical data sufficiency questions?",
    "Answer": "E",
    "Explanation": "Answer choices usually cover sufficiency of Statement (1), Statement (2), both together, either alone, or neither. An answer choice stating 'both statements contradict' is not standard.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Only Statement (1) is sufficient.",
    "OptionB": "Only Statement (2) is sufficient.",
    "OptionC": "Both statements together are sufficient.",
    "OptionD": "Either statement alone is sufficient.",
    "OptionE": "Both statements contradict each other.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 13,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "When a data sufficiency question asks for a numerical value, what is the minimum requirement for a statement to be sufficient?",
    "Answer": "B",
    "Explanation": "A statement is sufficient if it allows you to determine the exact numerical value uniquely, not just a range or multiple possibilities.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "It provides a range of possible values.",
    "OptionB": "It allows determination of a unique numerical value.",
    "OptionC": "It gives a formula involving the value.",
    "OptionD": "It mentions the variable without any numbers.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 14,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  },
  {
    "Question": "If Statement (1) says 'The number is even' and Statement (2) says 'The number is greater than 10', can you determine the number uniquely?",
    "Answer": "E",
    "Explanation": "Neither statement alone nor together provides enough information to identify a unique number; many even numbers greater than 10 exist.",
    "PictureURL": "",
    "OptionA": "Only Statement (1) is sufficient.",
    "OptionB": "Only Statement (2) is sufficient.",
    "OptionC": "Either statement alone is sufficient.",
    "OptionD": "Both statements together are sufficient.",
    "OptionE": "Statements (1) and (2) together are not sufficient.",
    "TestName": "Data Sufficiency Practice Test",
    "Content Type": "Question",
    "Title": "Understanding Data Sufficiency Format",
    "Item": 15,
    "Type": "multiple choice",
    "Path": "Subtopics: — Understanding the data sufficiency format"
  }
]