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Mar 25 at 9:14 vote accept Haider
S Mar 25 at 9:11 history suggested Harikrishnan M CC BY-SA 4.0
Fixed image placement.
Mar 25 at 1:08 review Suggested edits
S Mar 25 at 9:11
Mar 24 at 17:53 history became hot network question
Mar 24 at 16:40 comment added Mithoron chemistry.stackexchange.com/questions/58630/…
Mar 24 at 15:45 answer added Karsten timeline score: 8
Mar 24 at 12:00 answer added Haider timeline score: 1
Mar 24 at 11:56 comment added Haider @HarikrishnanM According to NCERT this compound will NOT show GI, so I think I would just follow that. Thanks for the help :)
Mar 24 at 11:22 comment added Harikrishnan M just be sure by checking the NCERT as that is THE KING in this case. From my personal experience, institute books are good only for questions.
Mar 24 at 11:20 comment added Haider @HarikrishnanM By "some books" I meant my institute's book, and the answer just says "Will show GI", and no further explanation is provided, so I don't think there is much to quote.
Mar 24 at 11:06 comment added Harikrishnan M According to the NCERT (which the National Testing Agency follows religiously and accepts no other source), $\ce{XYC=CXY, XYC=CYZ, XYC=CZW}$ kinds of compounds show geometrical isomerism. Going by that alone it is seen that the cyclo ring is symmetric with respect to the doubly bonded carbon, and thus it does not exhibit geometrical isomerism. // However, a point is that you should include the sources which you have seen and quote it (...some books say otherwise... - include which books and quote them) so that the community can help you better, and thus I am downvoting the question now.
Mar 24 at 10:30 history edited Loong CC BY-SA 4.0
added 17 characters in body; edited title
S Mar 24 at 9:52 review First questions
Mar 24 at 11:02
S Mar 24 at 9:52 history asked Haider CC BY-SA 4.0