Long story short, NO! Learn "correct chess" instead of "trap chess", otherwise you will never be any good. Only purpose for knowing traps is to watch out for cheap shots by your opponent. Trying to execute cheap shot tricks will ultimate fail for you in the long run.
Traps should simply be known so as to avoid them. Attempting to execute them typically means you are going out of your way to make a bad move just to see if your opponent will fall for something. If he falls for it, great. If not, your position is worse. Not worth it!
So really the only traps you need to be aware of are those that are built into the opening itself. A prime example when it comes to 1.d4 is the following:
As someone who's known the rules for chess for quite some years, but only recently started playing much more, I'd classify myself as a beginner. I've recently been starting with d4 over e4 when playing as white as I generally like many of the possible openings out of it such as the queen's gambit and whatnot. My question in particular is to times when I am playing white.
What I want to ask for the sake of my curiosity, are there any traps that I could learn about and get under my belt that I could possibly utilize after the d4 opening. Specifically, I'm looking for traps that aren't gimmicky like the 4 move checkmate, and still allow for normal development (Meaning that should my opponent see the possibility for said trap, I could simply abort the attempt at it, and continue developing without being worse off.)
I guess the TL;DR is that I want to know if there's traps that are known out of the d4 opening that don't require basing my entire opening on them, such that I could abort the attempt at anytime and still have normal development going. Mainly looking for lesser known rather than famous ones I can simply look up myself.
I don't expect something like this to magically make me a good player, but It'd probably help in terms of playing a better d4 opening whenever I play.