Agree with Dennis too but if I were building res-cabinetry (thankfully not) in my area and stuck to frameless sending the face-framers elsewhere, even after showing the gains, they would all be at HD or the 2-3 other custom shops. I'd be sitting in an impeccably clean/tidy shop filing my nails. Maybe snag a few full insets but those would be few and far between. Its in no way a correct commentary on frameless/full-access but around here frameless in residential is overwhelmingly seen as a cost savings option even using veneer core. PB/MDF core, MDF routed doors, foil, whatever, they see as cheap/plastic even if you put 5 piece wood doors on. Its just the way these people see it and educating them is a doozy. Its weird. For years its been said the cabinet maker cares about the carcass and drawers more than the customer and no one cares about carcass but floating frameless they pick the carcass to death.
To the Scott, I think the answers you will get with regards to construction methods/practices will be as many as there are options. Everything from face frames glued and clamped to the carcass (know one shop that still does that), to pocket screws, dado, biscuits, on and on. Same with face frames, M&T, pocket screws, Hoffman, domino....
Construction details and overhangs kinda depend on your construction method, applied ends, skins, etc. Hardware affected by are you building mostly door or drawer cabs. I probably run 3 residential kitchens a year, often less. for years they have been almost 100% drawer cabs on the bases or doors with roll-outs, so I build flush interiors, no blocking out (other than a roll out) for slides, they are planted right on the carcass. Hinge plates are not projecting back off the face frame in to mid air. Same with uppers. All finished ends are rail & stile and applied so with a flush interior, 1/2" carcass, 1 1/2" face frame, we have a 1" overhang and the applied end leaves the standard 1/4" when applied. Face frames are glued and pocket screwed for both construction and application to the boxes.