What I did for 1 was, I looked at 2 and I tried to break the reaction down into more steps. Is there not a way to do that? I find them easier to follow when I try to break them down into more steps.
Would you say that this was the correct way to show 1) as a breakdown of 2) instead?
I got 3 and 4 from here
http://www.chem.wisc.edu/areas/reich/handouts/elecpush/epush-1.htmThe website says that 4 is a shorthand version of 3.
and then I invented 5 myself using what I thought was a diagram that obeyed all the rules of curly arrow diagrams. I thought that perhaps, if you know the rules of curly arrow diagrams (and follow them), then as long as you get the correct final molecule, then perhaps it's correct.
I found 7 on the internet, and I tried to break it up into more steps, creating 6.
I thought that when you have a curly arrow from one bond to another bond, you are basically showing a short hand version of a longer reaction. I thought I was showing this with 6.
I'm not sure if I'm violating the rules of the curly arrow diagrams, or if I'm following the rules properly, but violating some other rule. What kind of material should I be looking at to fix whatever I'm doing wrong?