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Learn openings

Hello,
I would improve my chess skills: I practised a lot with tactics and I'm learning something about strategy. I think I'm ready to learn something about openings, but I don't know where I could start.
Should I memorize only some lines for some openings? And where can I find these lines?
Thank you, have a nice day (and sorry for my english)
Endgames are far more important than openings.
Anyway, if you decide on studying openings, you should start with openings for black, i.e. defences against 1 e4 and then against 1 d4.
Best way is to decide on some viable defence and then play through grandmaster games with this opening.
This site shows the names of the openings used in played games. Just google the names to find the lines for those openings.

Try them out and see what opening(s) you like. Read books about them if you like.

If you don't like to memorize lines from a book, you can simply memorize the first few moves of the openings and start playing them, that way you will learn the openings, main lines, lesser lines, traps, positional ideas etc. naturally through trial and error.

I took the route of learning by playing, after like 9 years of playing 2 openings I still have trouble with some lines. Memorizing from a book is surely faster, but it is not fun for me. Also when I discover a positional idea in an opening line on my own it gives me great pleasure and a feeling of understanding what I'm doing vs. just repeating from memory like a robot.

I believe the best way to pick up openings is to study grandmaster games (complete, annotated) and copy the opening moves you like. There are also opening books which focus on complete games (I'd like to mention "Mastering the chess openings" by John Watson as an example). It will take you much longer to develop a complete repertoire with an answer against everything that way, but you will pick up the middlegame themes and your overall chess will improve along the way (at least i hope this will happen for me because i only recently began to study this way).
For example i feel that my ability to calculate and visualise could benefit from this at least as much as from solving puzzles.
I am not a strong player so maybe this is not qualified advice, i still wanted to share my opinion. Maybe a more experienced player would like to verify or correct this.
A book that I really enjoyed was The penguin book of chess openings.
It just has a few pages on many different openings, but you end up having a very good GENERAL idea of said opening.
I always thought learning specific lines until move 20 was useless at our level. Just the general idea is good enough.
Once you find an opening you like, don't forget youtube as an easy source of info.
Thank you all, I'll try to build a little training program
Thank you again!

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