As Honclbrif says, you can never have a "1-alkanone". A carbonyl group on the end of a molecule automatically makes that molecule an aldehyde.
There's a good reason for differentiating between ketones and aldehydes, because even though they both contain a carbonyl ground and show some similar carbonyl chemistry, the terminal position of the C=O gives aldehydes some special properties.
Your 3-hydroxy-3-methylbutan-2-one is perfectly correct, if a little fussy. Most organic chemists would be able to figure out where everything went if you omitted the "-2-" locator for the carbonyl group. But for the sake of academic test-taking, I'd leave the locator in.
If the compound were
(CH3)2COHCH2CHO
It would be 3-Hydroxy-3-methylbutanal
excuse me
yes, I am taking some standard chemistry tests so I hope to know the naming in a more standard way
refer to my question before
with the name 3-hydroxy-3-methylbutan-2-one
Although you said that the name is perfectly correct , I just doubt if it is true.
My reason is that while propanone we won't use propan-1-one because it is not necessary to do so.
As a result, I also think that -2- is not necessary because in this case C=O must be placed in carbon numbered "2" because of the presence of other substitute (-OH and -CH3)
so to put it simply, which one is more correct / standard?
3-hydroxy-3-methylbutan-2-one
or
3-hydroxy-3-methylbutanone
??