With the usual disclaimer: I am not a mechanic nor any kind of expert, so be careful.
I think there are, in essence, 4 ways for the air to get to combustion chambers:
1. Throttle, only if opened
2. Idle channel, where the idle screw is
3. WRD (when engine is below operating temperature, warm up cycle only)
4. Leaks in manifold and/or anything that is attached to it
Let's make assumption that screwing idle screw all the way down cuts air completely (I do not know that). This air channel can be plugged easily if need be (the hose there).
If you are saying that your engine runs idle despite idle air screw screwed tight WHEN COLD, although I never checked it, it may be possible, I think that it just runs on WRD air. Easy way to check it is to unscrew FIP air filter and plug the opening with your thumb. The engine should die. If it does not then either the assumption above is not correct or there is another way air gets to engine.
In any condition - warm or cold, if you plug idle channel and plug the WRD with your thumb and engine is still running - you either have the throttle not closing fully or there is a leak somewhere (e.g. brake booster is typical). If that is the case, you need to get rid of it first as you will not set/adjust anything.
There are ways to test both that even I can do.
So this is for your question from your first post.
Then there is a discussion about warm up cycle rich or lean, long or short - this is mrfatboy lead and the FIP simulator topic.