From somewhat casual US practice, fixing various plumbed bits:
Using a tapered tap is the same as using a straight tap in that you screw it in the same way, clear the threads the same way, and look up the proper drill size to use and use that, the same as for straight taps. You don't say "oh, a thus-and-so thread uses a this-here drill for a straight tap, so I'll use that same size for tapered". Because in general it'll be different, and there's all sorts of reference material on the web if it's not in your Machinery's Handbook.
It is easier to start the thread, and gets progressively harder as you screw it in, as you should expect. I suppose that you also need to pay attention to tapping too deeply or too shallow -- I'm not sure how deep is enough, see the word "casual" in my first sentence. For something critical and standard I'd look it up. For something that's critical, old, and specially engineered, I think I'd tap it undersized, test fit, and then progressively deepen (i.e. widen) the tapped hole until things fit right.