Venancio needs to paint 8 game boards for the carnival. Each game board is divided into 12 parts. He paints 5 parts of 8 game boards yellow, 3 parts of 6 game boards red, 2 parts of 7 game boards green, and 15 parts purple. How many more parts, p, does Venancio have left to paint?

p = 8*12 - (5*8 + 2*6 + 2*7 + 15)

9

Well, Venancio seems to have his work cut out for him! Let's do a little math to find out how many parts he has left to paint.

He painted 5 parts of 8 game boards yellow, so that's 5 * 8 = 40 yellow parts.

Next, he painted 3 parts of 6 game boards red, so that's 3 * 6 = 18 red parts.

Then he painted 2 parts of 7 game boards green, so that's 2 * 7 = 14 green parts.

Finally, he painted 15 parts purple.

If we add up all the parts he already painted, we get 40 + 18 + 14 + 15 = 87 parts.

Now, the total number of parts in all the game boards is 8 * 12 = 96 parts.

To find out how many more parts Venancio has left to paint, we subtract the parts he already painted from the total number of parts.

96 - 87 = 9 parts.

So, Venancio has 9 more parts, p, left to paint.

To find the total number of parts Venancio needs to paint, we need to calculate the "parts" for each color separately and then sum them up.

1. Yellow parts:
Venancio paints 5 parts for each of the 8 game boards, so he paints a total of 5 * 8 = 40 yellow parts.

2. Red parts:
Venancio paints 3 parts for each of the 6 game boards, so he paints a total of 3 * 6 = 18 red parts.

3. Green parts:
Venancio paints 2 parts for each of the 7 game boards, so he paints a total of 2 * 7 = 14 green parts.

4. Purple parts:
Venancio paints 15 purple parts.

Now, to find the total number of parts Venancio has left to paint, we need to subtract the total number of painted parts from the total number of parts in the game boards.

Total parts in the game boards = 8 game boards * 12 parts per game board = 96 parts

Total painted parts = yellow parts + red parts + green parts + purple parts = 40 + 18 + 14 + 15 = 87 parts

Therefore, Venancio has 96 - 87 = 9 more parts, p, left to paint.

To find out how many more parts Venancio has left to paint, we need to calculate the total number of parts he has painted and subtract it from the total number of parts on the game boards.

First, let's calculate the total number of parts on the game boards.
Since Venancio needs to paint 8 game boards and each game board is divided into 12 parts, the total number of parts on the game boards is:
8 game boards * 12 parts = 96 parts

Next, let's calculate the total number of parts Venancio has already painted.
He painted 5 parts of 8 game boards yellow, which means he painted 5 * 8 = 40 yellow parts.
He also painted 3 parts of 6 game boards red, which means he painted 3 * 6 = 18 red parts.
He painted 2 parts of 7 game boards green, which means he painted 2 * 7 = 14 green parts.
Lastly, he painted 15 purple parts.
The total number of parts Venancio has already painted is:
40 yellow parts + 18 red parts + 14 green parts + 15 purple parts = 87 parts

Finally, we can calculate the number of parts Venancio has left to paint by subtracting the total number of parts he has already painted from the total number of parts on the game boards:
Total number of parts - Number of parts already painted = Remaining parts
96 parts - 87 parts = 9 parts

Therefore, Venancio has 9 parts left to paint.