It depends - if you connect from a command-line or Winforms app DIRECTLY to your SQL Server, you EITHER specify "Integrated Security=SSPI;" and then use your Windows credentials as logon credentials, OR you specify "user id=....;pwd=....." - but that's then a SQL logon - NOT your Windows logon.
You mention "impersonate and then connect" - that seems to indicate ASP.NET - that's a totally different story again. If you impersonate, then you're basically using your Windows credentials, e.g. the web server will "impresonate" impersonate" you and log on as you (using your Windows credentials). In that case, again, no "uid=....;pwd=....." needs to be specified (if it is, it will be ignored).
As that link you mentioned clearly shows - if you can connect directly, and you specify "Integrated Security=SSPI;", then this takes precedence over any uid=...;pwd=.... which you might also specified and logs you in using your Windows credentials; those extra uid=...;pwd=.... pieces are ignored.
Marc
