I'm rooted anyway, so my boot.img is no longer stock/unchanged. The only downside I've noticed when having TWRP installed is that I can no longer get to fastbootD ... but I only needed to use that once so far when I tried to flash that abl file to get rid of the orange state unlock warning. Instead I used Firmware Flasher and got rid of it that way lol.
If I have TWRP installed then I don't need to worry about being near a PC when I try a new theme or Magisk mod. So having it permanently does have it's advantages
It's exactly that. I 100% agree with what has been described here. Flashing may no longer be mandatory, but provides ease of use and portability (i.e. not having to carry a cable and laptop around, just to do a quick "safety" backup before something that you feel may cause a screwup); and if you're rooted anyways, nothing much changes in terms of stock/unchanged-ness.
You can still get to fastboot with the key combo I reckon, no? (vol-up + vol-down + pwr, long press)
It's possible to get that orange state warning off? I would like to inquire further information about this via PM good sir, thank you!
If I may, which partitions are to be chosen to back up? (When switching between custom roms, let's say the same firmware base) It used to be system, data and boot. I guessmuch has changed since nexus/HTC times
I have personally concluded to "super", "boot", "vendor_boot" and "data (exl. storage)".
I'm still pretty fresh to this A/B wizardry and dynamic partitions, so I would say that others like Nimueh and shadabkiani are way more qualified to answer.
In any case, if you're unsure, just take a backup of everything, as your first starting point; then you do have everything you need, should you ever need to restore it (knock on wood).
A good read on the topic is this one as well:
The default backup options in TWRP are system, data, and boot. For most cases, this is sufficient for backing up a ROM. (Note that in some rare cases, boot i...
twrp.me
Just make sure that any backups you take, you also keep them on multiple other locations (and ideally different storage mediums as well), for data safety.