Straight wall cases don't have the same stretch and trimming issues as bottlenecked cases and don't have the head separation issues.
From that perspective they potentially last a long time.
I reload .45 ACP cases until the mouth eventually splits. How long they last until that happens depends on how much you bell the case mouth. If you shoot jacketed or plated bullets you need minimal belling of the case, the brass gets works less and lasts longer before the case mouth cracks and splits. If you shoot cast bullets you'll need to bell the case mouth more, itl work harden more and the brass won't last as long.
Cases like the .38 Special can last a very long time as well, provided you don't get carried away with the belling, and provided you crimp very little - just enough to straighten the bell back out.
Once you start roll crimping into a crimp groove, you start working the brass a lot more and case life suffers. Most .38 Special loads don't require a roll crimp, but a lot of handloaders think they do and do it anyway.
Unless the bullets are backing out under recoil, or the SD in velocity is excessively high (due to the powder not properly igniting before it starts to scatter out of the case), you don't need a roll crimp. And if you need one, use the absolute minimum required. A little goes a long way.
Another killer of .38 special brass will be spider cracks in the middle of the case body. That happens more often in generously cut chambers where the brass expands more. It's also a bigger issue in Victory models originally chambered in .38 S&W or the British .38/200 equivalent and then rechambered for .38 Special. The wider bit shorter original chamber works the brass much harder in the area where the chamber is wider than .38 Special.
Cases like .357 Magnum run at higher pressure and often actually need a crimp and or need more crimp, and that tends to shorten the case life.
.45 Colt is also short lived as while the case is parallel walled the chamber is tapered .007" from mouth to base, so the case expands more near the base. The higher the pressure the, more expansion you get in the tapered chamber and the shorter the case life. Spider cracks in the case wall are what ends their useful life.
9mm cases? I lose them before I wear them out.