I haven't traded options for a long time, so am quite rusty and may not be the most reliable source of knowledge. However, I am willing to stick my neck out in the hope that more experienced option traders will rejoin the thread.
I believe that the most important point to understand, with option trading, is that one must ask oneself what the time value is and in what periods, if one is to be a buyer, is there the most time decay. The maximum decay area, is probably around 7-8 months right down to the last few days before expiry, but that would need checking out-- don't take my word as gospel. A rising share price, during this period, will not help a call buyer-- I can tell you that much from experience, and I can't see much point in trying. Regardless of the fact that there are many who may disagree with me, writers have the advantage because of the time decay, providing that they stay within the limits that I mentioned.
If anyone buys a long term option and the share does not move before the time decay begins to become apparent--- SELL before the wastage gets you!
I found, at that time, that the problem with far out options is the cost. They are dear and I could not afford to buy many. Probably, the close ones are the best but, believe me, you can get caught badly on those unless you are within a couple of days of expiry.
Now that I am old and grey, the most conservative course for me, apart from leaving them alone, would be writing covered options on shares that I own.
Index options are another thing. They require spreads for protection and I lump them together with all index trading---risky.
Split