Your question doesn't have a single, simple answer. If you review the references I cited earler, you'll have a good understanding of the fundamentals. Obviously, what works at one airport may not apply strictly at another (conflicts with nearby airports, airspace, noise-sensitive areas, IFR approaches, non-standard patterns, skydiving or glider operations, etc.).
The following guidance from the
Advisory Circular seems relevant in a general sense, however:
e. The FAA encourages pilots to use the standard traffic pattern. However, for those pilots who choose to execute a straight-in approach, maneuvering for and execution of the approach should be completed so as not to disrupt the flow of arriving and departing traffic. Therefore, pilots operating in the traffic pattern should be alert at all times toaircraft executing straight-in approaches.
I think it's also important here to emphasize
airmanship. Anyone who flies at non-towered airports regularly knows that there's a wide range of knowledge about and ability to fly the recommended, "standard" traffic pattern. Although you may be able to cite chapter and verse to demonstrate that flying a wide base leg to join a 1-mile final is legally OK, common sense and safety suggest that if there are other aircraft in the pattern, it's generally best to join the flow. You won't save that much time by taking shortcuts anyway.