As I said to
@albireo , I never once asked what B&W developer to use.
I was happy with the B&W developers I had. My questions were about trying to learn about the development process. It was the members of this forum that bombarded me with recommendations to try other developers, and if you go to a forum and people tell you that you should be using something else, what am I supposed to do? Ignore them? Then I am the noob who won't listen to advice. So I tried to listen to advice. You guys setup an impossible conundrum. Different members recommended that I try D23, D76 1+1, D76 stock, and MyTol, often disagreeing with each other, and when I made an effort to take the recommendations seriously, I'm suddenly the noob that is losing sleep over what developer to use.
I don't have enough expertise to engage in the detailed comparisons and discussions in the OP here, as this requires years of practical experience. I extend my respect for this.
However, I can recommend some books on the development process. Besides Ansel Adams' works mentioned earlier, consider "Photographic Chemicals and Chemistry" by J. Southworth, "Photographic Chemistry" by Pierre Glafkides, and "Photographic Chemistry" by Shinichi Kikuchi. These books offer theoretical insights into the development process, such as the general use of sodium sulfite or the effective pH for hydroquinone. While they don't provide practical experience or direct advice on choosing the best film or formula for specific scenes, they do offer guidance.
You may find that differences between developer formulas often come down to subtle variations in dosage, which can lead to some differences in effect but some times are also not significant. Especially among mainstream formulas, if D-76 were vastly superior to HC-110, or PCTEA/Xtol/Mytol significantly better than D-76, one would likely have been discontinued or forgotten (like D-51 and Amidol), but that hasn't happened. Even switching completely from Metol-hydroquinone to Phenidone-ascorbic acid might not necessarily make a significant difference......And if you've browsed through one or two Photographic Recipe Handbooks, you almost won't need to worry about how to follow suggestions—there are over a hundred pages of developer formulas in one old book, who can follow all of them? While each formula is considered unique by the authors and their manufacturers in past, I think I will only look for them when I'm very certain about the specific characteristics I want.
At my current level, if I can't perceive the differences, I consider mainstream formulas almost similar (like the metaphor above, Ford or Chevy? they all work well), at least for now. Future needs and practical experiences may change this perspective, but that's a concern for later. As many suggest, they're all good—try them if you have them on hand and choose the one you prefer.