The temperature issue I understand but I do want to create habits rather than be tempted to push my luck. Stepping outside the habit zone if that is what I decide to do for a specific instance, but only then.
Thanks Matt.
One of the benefits of having experience is that it means you have had the chance to learn and understand the relative importance of things. And from that you can understand what things need to be in your "habit zone" and what things don't. And experience can be shared on places like Photrio.
My experience and the experience of others leads to the conclusion that you truly can't do any harm printing under conditions of warm temperatures - at least temperatures that are within the range that permit you to be comfortable enough to be able to enjoy darkroom work.
If the developer is quite warm, it will just speed things up a bit - it won't hurt anything. If that becomes inconvenient, it can be slowed with a bit of dilution, but you probably won't bother.
That is because when you develop prints, you are developing essentially to (practical) completion. In other words, you develop until adding some more time doesn't make an appreciable amount of difference. During a long printing session, that time may slowly change anyways. It is fairly easy to tell when a print is developed enough, even when inexperienced, and it doesn't require exact precision.
All that working with warmer developer does is get you to where you want to be slightly quicker. For that reason, you really don't have to include precise temperature control in the printing darkroom as part of your "habit zone". At least not with respect to moderately warm temperatures.
It is a bit different if you are one of our friends from places like the UK, because
some print developers start misbehaving when they are too cold. In essence, if you need to wear a sweater when in the darkroom, you need to warm your trays.
The situation is very different when developing film, where you need to stop developing when the film density is just where you want it to be - not more, but not much less either.
Save the cooler packs for film developing!