This is the art of volatility trading. A lot of proprietary research is devoted to this.
If you are long a straddle - if you hedge frequently, you can more closely mimic the realized vol of an underlying but you incur more transaction costs.
If you hedge less frequently, you are going to deviate more from your theoretical (implied vol - realized vol) pnl but you incur fewer transaction costs.
Further if you can develop a view on delta, you can overlay that on your strategy by hedging occasionally - however, that could be viewed as a separate trade all together, which is the path dependency that longthewings is referring to. If you rally 5% in the underlying and don't hedge, you will make a lot more money if the stock continues to rally 5% or will lose your gamma pnl if the stock falls 5%. If you hedge you will make a little bit of money if the stock goes in either direction.
"If you hedge you will make a little bit of money if the stock goes in either direction".
Thanks. Should I not make more if the stock goes up 5%, then down 5% as opposed to it just keeps going up.? I am talking of the case where I hedge.