During Lunch, the cafeteria sells 12 sandwiches, 10 soups, and 9 salads
Six students had sandwiches and soup,
4 students had sandwiches and salads,
... 5 students had soup and salad, and
... 2 students had all three. How many students ate lunch?
 

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During Lunch, the cafeteria sells 12 sandwiches,
10 soups, and 9 salads
Six students had sandwiches and soup,
4 students had sandwiches and salads,
... 5 students had soup and salad, and
... 2 students had all three. How many
students ate lunch?

We need a Venn diagram. This is the best I can do.
Each rectangle holds the number of students who
bought a particular item. The intersections of
the rectangles (regions) will hold the number
of students who bought the items covered by
multiple rectangles.

                                Soup
                    +----------------------+
                    |               a             |
                    |                              |
                    |          +----------------------+
                    |          |             f     |         |
          +------|--------|-------+        |          |
          |         |   d     |    g   |         |          |
          |         |          |         |         |          | Sandwich
          |        +--------|-------|-------+         |
          |                    |         |                   |
Salad |                    |   e    |         c         |
          |       b           |         |                   |
          |                   +-------|---------------+
          |                             |
         +-----------------------+

Let's define each of the regions.
a is the number of students who bought only soup
b is the number of students who bought only a salad
c is the number of students who bought only a sandwich
d is the number of students who bought only soup and a salad
e is the number of students who bought only a salad and a sandwich
f is the number of students who bought only soup and a sandwich
g is the number of students who bought all three items

Now, we show the aggregates of the regions representing
the students who bought various combinations.

cefg = 12 sandwiches (all four of those regions
        are contained within the sandwich rectangle)
adfg = 10 bought soup
bdeg =  9 bought a salad
fg      =  6 bought soup and a sandwich
ge     =  4 bought a salad and a sandwich
dg     =  5 bought soup and a salad
g       =  2 bought all three items

We were given the number of students in region g, those who
bought all three items. We can insert the number 2 into that
region.

                                Soup
                    +----------------------+
                    |               a             |
                    |                              |
                    |          +----------------------+
                    |          |             f     |         |
          +------|--------|-------+        |          |
          |         |   d     |    g   |         |          |
          |         |          |   2    |         |          | Sandwich
          |        +--------|-------|-------+         |
          |                    |         |                   |
Salad |                    |   e    |         c         |
          |       b           |         |                   |
          |                   +-------|---------------+
          |                             |
         +-----------------------+

(I am restricted to 8000 characters, so I am forced to eliminate
the remaining diagrams. I hope you can follow along
without them.)

By subtracting the smaller regions from larger combinations
of regions, we can begin to determine the number of students
in each region.

Subracting g (2) from dg (5), we find that d represents 3 students who
bought ONLY soup and a salad.

Subracting g (2) from ge (4), we find that e represents 2 students who
bought ONLY a salad and a sandwich.

Subracting g (2) from fg (6), we find that f represents 4 students who
bought ONLY soup and a sandwich.

Subracting d (3), e (2) and g (2) from bdeg (9), we find that b represents
2 students who bought ONLY a salad.

Subracting d (3), f (4) and g (2) from adfg (10), we find that a represents
1 student who bought ONLY soup.

Finally, subracting e (2), f (4) and g (2) from cefg (12), we find that c
represents 4 students who bought ONLY a sandwich.

To find out how many students ate lunch (or at least bought lunch),
we add the numbers from all of the regions in the Venn diagram.
a + b + c + d + e + f + g = 1 + 2 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 4 + 2
a + b + c + d + e + f + g = 18

18 students ate lunch
by Level 11 User (78.4k points)
I'm posting the finished diagram with all the numbers filled in.

                                Soup
                    +----------------------+
                    |               a             |
                    |               1             |
                    |          +----------------------+
                    |          |             f     |         |
          +------|--------|-------+  4    |          |
          |         |   d     |    g   |         |          |
          |         |   3     |   2    |         |          | Sandwich
          |        +--------|-------|-------+         |
          |                    |         |                   |
Salad |                    |   e    |         c         |
          |       b           |   2    |         4        |
          |       2          +-------|---------------+
          |                             |
         +-----------------------+

As you can see, the numbers in the regions add up to 18.
by Level 11 User (78.4k points)

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