“…Functionalized arenes and heteroarenes (collectively, (hetero)arenes) occur in a diverse array of secondary metabolites (i.e., natural products), drug candidates, ligands (e.g., those employed in transition-metal-catalyzed reactions), polymers, and electronic materials. − Given the ubiquity of these structural motifs, synthetic chemists continue to seek efficient, generalizable syntheses to prepare these scaffolds. − Two approaches have primarily been pursued. In the first approach, the core (hetero)arene is assembled from acyclic precursors already bearing key substituents that will reside on the periphery of the (hetero)arene. − A second approach focuses on functionalizing the periphery of a preformed (hetero)arene core through sequential functionalizations . Of the two approaches, the latter has become more commonly employed due to the widespread availability of the unfunctionalized (hetero)arene precursors and the broad range of functionalization strategies that currently exist, including aromatic substitution reactions, − metal-mediated halogen-exchange reactions, , C–H functionalization processes, cross-coupling reactions, and the more recently developed photoredox catalysis …”