Lurpoa, on 2011-March-28, 05:55, said:
No doubt.
This is the sort of answer that makes me vote for option 1.
The point about having rules rather than just 'signalling what partner needs' is that you don't always know what partner needs. Under approach 1, at least you know what partner's signal means. Under approach 2 you may have zero information, as opposed to getting the right information at least some of the time.
I think Justin is actually confusing things slightly. If you play in a regular partnership for long enough both approaches come to the same thing because you basically never see a position that you haven't seen before and discussed (unlike bidding sequences where new things come up all the time, it's a long time since I've seen a genuinely new signalling position).
The poll is more about where you start from:
I start from having a fairly simple set of rules (e.g. opening King lead asks for count, opening ace or queen for attitude, first discard attitude etc ). As time goes on, these rules become more complex
The other way round is to start by saying 'I tell partner what he needs to know'. As time goes on, you start to generate agreements about what it is that partner needs to know.
p.s. as others have mentioned, explaining your methods as 'I tell partner what he needs to know' is extremely frustrating to declarer if you have years of experience. But that's a different discussion.