I've used gloves with wraps in the past because of wrist issues (gangliac cyst that popped and become calcification on a wrist tendon, which I have to get scraped clean in a couple of weeks) although I prefer straight wrist-wraps for support purposes. I only used the gloves/wraps on bench and OHP because of said wrist issues; otherwise they sat in my bag or stayed at home. In retrospect, I should have probably just tossed the gloves and went with basic wraps.
Chalk is useful too in the summer, and I've found a use for straps when doing heavy shrugs and rack pulls. Straps don't really have an impact on your grip strength unless you use them for everything; if you do grip work (farmer's walks, dead hangs, whatever) and only reserve them for situations where you're intentionally reducing/removing your grip strength from the equation for the sake of doing more work overall, it's not even an issue.
If you have to choose between "not doing an exercise because your grip is fatigued" and "using straps to hit the targeted muscle parts while reducing the use of secondary muscles for a single exercise" go with the latter; you're better off using a mechanical workaround like straps in order to get in your heavy work sets than not doing them at all. Plus, you can always do more gripwork; grab some plates or a trap bar or some heavy dumbbells and go end your workout with some farmer's walks.
I do advocate minimizing the usage of such workarounds though. You shouldn't be using straps for every set of rows, shrugs, deads, or similar exercises. Straps and wraps of any kind should be used to enable you to get more work in, not less. The only reason to use straps on most of your exercises is if you've got some issue or injury in your hands or forearm, in which case you gotta do what you gotta do to stay safe and train hard.