Pistol: Tumble, if I'm in the mood. Then run 'em all through the Dillon and shoot 'em again. If I see any split cases I toss 'em.
Hunting rifle: Tumble. Trim, if necessary. Load.
Accuracy rifle: 100 new cases from same lot. Preferably Federal Gold Medal, Norma, or Lapua. Trim all cases to length, remove burr from flash holes if punched rather than drilled. I don't bother uniforming primer pockets since Creighton Audette proved the uselessness of it.
Weigh all cases and reject the 50% at either end. Then check neck thickness with a ball mic. I hold onto the 30 most uniform cases out of the remaining 50. Now outside neck turning: first cut leaves about 20% of the neck untouched; second cut gets the remaining 20% but just barely. Then load on a straightline or competition neck die with reduced loads and fireform. Check outside concentricity and reject an additional 10 cases.
Now I have a nice set of twenty matched and prepped cases. With a tight, round chamber these can be fired 20-50 times depending upon cartridge and load. I usually won't tumble these cases, prefering to use a bit of 0000 steel wool on the outside of the necks and a brush on the inside.
HTH!