Duration
11s
Input Tokens
1443
Output Tokens
696
Cost
$0.01
Context
Input
As the first step you are reflecting and deciding on the plan to follow to complete the task. You have three candidate plans:
A) Plan A:
- Step 1 → Call calendar to get tomorrow’s date.
- Step 2 → Call flights (London ➜ Paris, date).
- Step 3 → Call web_search with query "London to Paris flights on [date]" to cross-check available flights found in the previous step.
- Step 4 → If there are discrepancies between flights tool and web search, re-query flights tool for confirmation.
- Step 5 → Summarize all gathered flight options and send results to the user.
B) Plan B:
- Step 1 → Call calendar to get tomorrow’s date.
- Step 2 → Call flights (London ➜ Paris, date).
- Step 3 → Summarize flights tool results and send to the user.
C) Plan C:
- Step 1 → Call calendar to get tomorrow’s date.
- Step 2 → Call flights (London ➜ Paris, date).
- Step 3 → If the flights tool returns fewer than 3 options, call web_search with query "London to Paris flights on [date]" to supplement results.
- Step 4 → Merge both sets of results and send the combined summary to the user.
Pick **one** plan you will execute.Expected output
Plan B, is the preferred one as its the most efficient, and that is instructedModel output
Reasoning: The user's request is to find available flights from London to Paris for tomorrow. The available tools include a dedicated 'flights' tool specifically designed to find available flights, and a 'calendar' tool to get the date. Plan A introduces unnecessary complexity by always cross-checking with a web search and potentially re-querying, which violates the principle of avoiding unnecessary loops. Plan C introduces conditional logic to use a web search if the flights tool returns fewer than 3 options, which adds unnecessary steps if the flights tool is sufficient. Plan B is the most direct and effective path: it gets tomorrow's date using the calendar tool, queries the dedicated flights tool, and summarizes the results. This perfectly aligns with the instruction to 'Always aim for the most direct and effective path' and avoids unnecessary tool calls.
Response: Plan B