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You should be aggressive when you think you've got the best hand. You're doing this for 2 reasons
1) To make money
2) To protect your hand agaisnst draws. ( If you aren't worried about draws, like if you have a full-house and someone might be drawing to a flush, then you can slow-play, but other than that, don't slow-play.)
If you're being aggressive when you think you have the best hand, and getting callers, then great. If people are consistently folding, then you need to open-up a bit. This will disguise the times that you're betting with the best hand, and even if you get called, you're not in terrible shape. I wouldn't exactly call it bluffing, but be aggressive sometimes when you've got a good-but-not-great hand, and sometimes when you're drawing to a flush or a straight. That's called a semi-bluff. You'll have enough chances to bet when you've got a great hand, and good-but-not-great, and a semi-bluff, that I wouldn't worry about much else yet.
For me, being aggressive means
1) Preflop, betting 4xbb plus 1 for each limper.
2) Postflop, betting between 60% and 100% of the flop, depending on situations.
3) Only calling bets when I'm getting good odds. Other-wise raise or get out of the hand.
Someone mentioned above about betting when you're behind, in order to get your opponent to fold. At lower limits, a lot of people won't fold if they have a decent hand, so betting with the hope that you're opponent will fold can be dangerous. Focus first on extracting value when you're ahead, and if you're getting lots of folds, then start thinking about making money when you're behind.
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