For me with Glocks, when breaking them in, you have to be aware of grip (thumbs forward, thumbs forward, thumbs forward I keep telling myself). It does, after enough rounds, work its way into your mind.
Its one of the reasons I talk about how its not really important how you shoot the gun in the first few magazines but how you shoot after 1000 rounds. Hundreds of thousands (millions) of institutional users manage to qualify with them after some instruction and practice. However to some degree that holds true to all the firearms you are discussing. I really don't think there is a bad choice in there.
At risk of sounding like I was defending Glock I meant this as observational. If you don't want the Glock for any reason don't get it. There are plenty of choices that are just as good.
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