Yes, of course. I should have qualified that. My apologies. Maybe "typical best" should have been the qualifier.
Sorry if I came off too "wanky" ......
I did my first radiant almost 30 years ago -- while radiant was not new by any measure ... it was just getting started in the USA with PEX. Even PEX had been around for 20+ years ... we also did not have the controls or low temp capable boilers in the USA. At least in a consumer situation. In my case it all came from Germany -- and many in the industry used a combination of german and old USA books on the subject. German engineers don't go for standard formulas ....
My point with the above. Everything was figured out -- heat loss per room. Radiant output at different water temps -- etc. Things that are very important and are still not being done in the USA. Try getting a simple whole house heat loss done.
As the radiant industry matured -- the retailers came up against the perceived complexity of "designing" a system and the real cost differences VS forced air -- other hydronic. It was easier to fall back on a simple formulaic layout -- that also by the way cut install costs and did not cause too many problems on the operational side. Tubing and manifolds being much more expensive back then. We also had much cheaper energy.
In Germany -- the systems are about energy savings while still providing comfort .. higher upfront costs are expected .... but, the energy savings must occur. They design for low temp water.
Today, PEX is cheap and so are manifolds -- designing a better pipe layout is easy and adds very little to a system ... but, the old ways in the USA stick.
I ran into the issue on my recent project -- "This is how we always do it". They don't know why. Also -- many installers .. have never lived in a building with radiant. Same with the new VS HVAC equipment -- many installers stay away -- but have no real experience living with a great system.
It's less important in many utility buildings -- but knowing and understanding how do make a multi use building space comfortable with different temps is not hard. Many people build garages with spaces they know will just hold vehicles -- others will be working space and others may be used when just siting or working at a bench. Adding tubing w/o changing water temps can provide various temps throughout a space for very little money.