SmoothOper wrote:I just think that the solutions to some problems aren't consistent with certain strategies. For example two strategies one emphasizing lightness and flexibility and another thickness and influence will have different tesuji and it isn't a good idea to mix the two, they are incompatible, hence it isn't a good idea to study both tesuji.
I'm curious - do you plan to play both against opponents who use strategies that emphasize lightness and flexibility and against opponents who emphasize thickness and influence, who might use tesuji that you haven't studied against you?
How do you prevent opponents who have studied tesuji that you haven't from catching you unaware and using them against you to great effect? Do you study them at least enough to recognize the situations where they might be useful and try to avoid or defend against them? And if you try to avoid and defend against them, without detailed study on precisely when one of these tesuji can be effective, how do you avoid wasting moves defending when you don't actually need to?
Or do you think that you can control the game to such a degree that the opponent's strategy mostly doesn't matter, so that the tesuji that the opponent has studied and that you haven't studied aren't relevant? If so, how do you stop your opponent from doing the same to you, and making the tesuji he's studied relevant and your tesujis irrelevant?
Or maybe you do something else besides either of these?