IMO, it doesn't matter as long as temps are not too extreme, they're somewhat consistent, fluctuate between "day/night", and most importantly, you react to any extremes. just read this thread and you'll see what I mean below. Successful grows with temps and humidity all over the spectrum in the replies here.
If the temps spike higher than 90F, they need more water, feed them more. If the temps get too low like 50F raise the temps. Indoor I try to maintain 85F +-4F lights-on, and 70F +-5 lights off but that's just a guideline for me. However, I also have to deal with summer temps up to 90-100F outside (in turn raising temps inside), and winter temps as low as 0F, in turn colder inside. If it's too hot, I try to cool it down, and read the plants/increase water requirements as needed. Too cold, I heat to maintain lights-off temps above 60F.
As far as humidity, I try to maintain 45-60% during veg., 30-40 during flowering to avoid mould issues more than anything. But even this is "ideal" and plants will do just fine if you get spikes here & there.
I've gone indoor recently but have grown 5-6 footers ("christmas trees") in those extreme outdoor temps, getting 6-9 dry/cured oz/plant, dependant more on strain than anything else. Typical outdoor daytime temps 70-90 during June-August, typical day temps during Sept/October in the 60-70F, and night temps as low as 40-45F. Always pick them around mid-October before the first significant frost.
Remember we're growing weed, keyword *WEED*, these things can take a lot of abuse. The key is balance and all the factors combined. Think basics...
** Lots of air-flow around the plants and fresh air exchange (air)
** Not over or under-watering (water)
** Sufficient lighting, it doesn't matter what type, CFL, LED, HPS, HID, key is enough lighting for the size of grow (light)
** Deal with extremes as well as you can and adjust to the conditions, it's not rocket science, don't complicate things
2 cents
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