Let's go through this step-by-step.
1) Points close and charge the coil.
2) 195° later the points open. The spark does not yet fire.
3) Magnetic field in the primary collapses.
4) Voltage is induced in the secondary.
5) Secondary voltage rises until the plug gap is ionized enough to allow current to flow through the gap.
6) At this time, the strobe flashes and if you're lucky, the timing marks are aligned.
2 to 5 takes, say 5 degrees.
Note that the strobe flashes on step 6 at virtually the same time the spark occurs.
Electronic goes through the same steps:
1) Charge
2) Remove primary current source
3) Mag field collapses
4) Secondary voltage is induced
5) Plug gap is ionized until current can flow through the gap.
6) Strobe flashes.
Time from 2 to 5 is, say, 1 degree. But the strobe still flashes an inconsequential amount of time after the spark occurs.
But notice WHEN the strobe flashes: AFTER the spark has been initiated. Whether it be points or electronic, the time between the spark, and flash of the strobe, is effectively zero.
Everything that happens before the spark, and consequential strobe flash, is completely irrelevant to timing your ignition using an inductive timing light.