Always define a type. As mentioned, if you don't the compiler will choose for you, and it may not be as expected.
It also becomes important when dealing with classes. For example you create a private variable foo
in your class, such as:
private var _foo; // no type is defined
Later down the track, you want to add a get/set property for it:
public function get foo():??? { return _foo; }
public function set foo(val:???):void { _foo = val; }
What would you be passing in? And how do you document this for someone else to use?
Where as if you had
private var _foo:Number;
public function get foo():Number { return _foo; }
public function set foo(val:Number):void { _foo = val; }
It is clear, straight away what foo does in both the get/set cases.
And one more thing. If you want to create a MovieClip variable which references something on the stage, say:
var mymc = stage_mc; // Hmmm, not so good
If you wanted to call a MovieClip method on mymc, say play(), the compiler will throw an error because it doesn't 'know' mymc has a play method (how would it?). So by typing it (in the sense of adding a type to it, like MovieClip), you are letting the compiler know what methods and properties should be available.
Example:
var mymc:MovieClip = stage_mc; // Ahh, much better!
It also alows the compiler to do type checking. So in the above example, if you tried to pass in a textfield to the movieclip variable mymc, an error will throw an error. This stops bigger bugs sneaking in.
I'm very passionate about type checking in AS3 - I'm glad Flash finally introduced it, and now that it's here, let's use it!