Yeah, I've tried. I'm not familiar with reactions of esters. I thought the base was going to attack the carbonyl, but then a friend told me something about the alpha carbon, and now I'm not sure, that's why I'm asking. I read my textbook but there's was nothing about the base/nucleophile attacking the alpha carbon. All the examples had the base/nucleophile attacking the carbonyl. This is what I've got:
The alpha carbon losses a proton and forms a carbanion. The carbanion then attacks another molecule at the carbonyl. There's an oxygen with a negative charge, but it forms the double bond with the carbon again as the ether leaves, right?
Why does the base/nucleophile attack the alpha carbon instead of the carbonyl? I've seen examples and each one has the base/nucleophile attacking the carbonyl.