Chogy
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In 2007 I took a few pilot lessons before realizing I could not afford it. My instructor had told me that a pilot has to have 3 landings at least in 90 days, if not he makes 3 landings (all touch and go) before he can fly off into his journey. Is this practiced in the airforce as well?
Each Nation/Air Force has different "currency" rules, but in the U.S., your flight instructor is correct. The Air Force had differing currency rules from the civilian ones, but honestly I can't remember them, as any normal flying job keeps you current, unless you are sick for a long time.
There are also currency rules for night operations, AAR, and other mission-specific tasks.
What are the advantages or disadvantages of a particular formation over others?
Who decides which formation to make and what factors go into that decision?
What is the role of each aircraft in different formations?
Gubbi, you could write a book and still not fully answer your questions. There are dozens of formations mixed with dozens of missions, and they have evolved over the years. For example, the "fighting wing" formation of Korea is obsolete, replaced by a line-abreast "tactical" formation, which is a spread of 1 to 2 nm, and an altitude stack.
For other missions, you can have box, trains, echelons, arrowheads, hi-lo stacks, so many of them. If you have a specific comparison, I can probably address them.