“…Due to the utility of 1,3-dienes in organic synthesis, a variety of strategies to access these compounds have been developed. , Olefination of carbonyl compounds with stoichiometric allyl nucleophiles has been widely employed in the synthesis of conjugated dienes; − however, the products are generally obtained as inseparable E/Z mixtures (Figure A). , Although considerable advances have been made toward stereoselective olefination of carbonyl substrates, most methods to access 1,3-dienes result in the E,E- isomer. ,,, To avoid the formation of isomeric product mixtures, transition-metal-catalyzed cross-coupling utilizing preformed organometallic reagents and vinyl (pseudo)halides has emerged as a practical route to stereoselectively synthesize dienes (Figure B). − In these processes, the geometry of the diene product is dictated by the stereochemistry of the coupling partners. Complementary approaches to prepare 1,3-dienes, including C–H activation of olefin starting materials, , rearrangements of allenes or alkynes, and ene-yne metathesis of acyclic precursors, , have also been developed. , …”