"Net" style Wiring
 

Nowdays, I prefer to wire a house as a net, rather than like a bush. I run a Main Loop up one wall, across the attic ceiling, and down the other wall, joining the ends in the cellar. The Main Loop goes in early in the assembly (for some houses I run it as I am building).

Then I do ceiling runs from one end of the house to the other, either joining the Main Loop on both ends or from one baseboard, up the wall, across the ceiling, and to the other baseboard (to join the Base Run later).

Then I put in the front-to-back dividers (not cross dividers like bathroom or blind dividers if the house has them), and do the Base Run, again all the way from one back wall to the other, around every divider (thru the doorway), and with folded corners over the front door so it is all in one piece. This Base Run connects to the Main Loop on both ends (and possibly to the Ceiling Run on both ends depending on where I put the Ceiling Run).

The object is to make every run in one piece so there are no unnecessary connections in the run, and to energize every run at both ends to reduce resistance and to make the connections redundant for a more robust installation.

Of course, this makes it essential to only connect copper-to-copper and blue-to-blue.

 
The Main Loop is continuous in one piece Ceiling loops join the Main Loop on both ends
Base Loops join the Main Loop on both ends Sconce Runs and Ceiling Runs join on both ends