All rebate type planes require straight edges,
Yes no problem. But straightish will do. The typical camber curve on a jack plane would only show as a tiny fraction of a mm at narrow width of a rebate plane.
match planing requires a straight edge,
Not at all. Depends on your technique. Mine is to square/straighten edges as per normal, (machine or hand) but then to match plane each joint e.g. a table top, stand each board in the vice and sit the next one on vertically, one pair at a time to see how they fit, check for flatness with a straight edge, then plane to match perfectly by taking off a little here and a little there.
The camber is particularly useful here as you can plane to one side or the other to alter a slight bevel either way.
I find this much easier than trying to get every edge dead straight and square before trying to join them (if that's how others do it, I don't know). Have to mark them, as any swapped around edges almost certainly would not fit each other
oh and let's not forget chisels.
Chisels don't need to be perfectly square. Why would they?
The obsession with perfect squareness/flatness/angles is not solved by using jigs and precision approaches, quite the opposite
it is caused and made worse by them - you can't easily sharpen anything if it is not already close to the parameters of the modern sharpening kit, as yer man points out with his fancy jig in the video - you have to adjust your funny edge angles to fit the kit, instead of just doing it!
Note also he completely omits any comment on the bigger part of sharpening but concentrates on a fine edge on an already perfectly shaped bevel. Cheating!
It's so much easier without all the clumsy modern sharpening kit and mysterious rituals. If precise squareness is needed then it's no problem anyway.
Anybody ever bought the Odate Crown Plates? I thought they were about the extreme limit of modern sharpening craziness and everybody might have started to have doubts by now!