I share Prashun's sentiment. Save your money until you know where it best applies.
Sell the table saw anyways. I've hurt myself with hand tools (a few times) so caution needs to be applied to all things from handling rough stock on through to finishing.
As a relative newbie, it's a good idea to do box making. You can also just cut joinery for practice.
Given that you have a planer, I would remove the wind (twist) from a board before planing. My normal procedure is to rough cut to length, joint (remove twist/bow/cup from one face), transfer my thickness marks with a gauge and then cut the opposing face to thickness). A thickness planer does that last step for you.
Last edited by Brian Holcombe; 04-16-2016 at 7:06 AM.
Bumbling forward into the unknown.