Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The design concept behind multi-zone is to reduce the need to use exposure compensation.
And remember: always make your exposure compensations by opening the lens aperture.
On this camera exposure compensation and extreme film speeds were mutually exclusive.
"Exposure compensation" will work better, with settings perhaps even at full "stop" or more over-exposed.
This gives the user control over the sharpness, flash strength, white balance, and exposure compensation.
Another example is the exposure compensation feature.
Apple still hasn't offered any kind of exposure compensation control (we'd definitely take that over the current digital zoom).
Exposure compensation was available in all exposure modes.
The measure, known as the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act, was passed on a voice vote.
With the touch of a finger, you can select an autofocus point, change shooting modes, and fine tune exposure compensation.
On low-end video camcorders, exposure compensation may be the only manual exposure control available.
The meter itself is an "intelligent" version that reads various areas of the image and decides on its own when exposure compensation is needed.
Continuous mode for double exposure compensation.
For example, the quick control dial on the back of the camera, which can be operated by the right thumb, allows for immediate exposure compensation.
Its settings can be manually adjusted to a degree, via "program shift" and exposure compensation controls with an eight-stop range.
The sense of exposure compensation is opposite that of the EV scale itself.
You can see that in good lighting, the exposure compensation settings are pretty useless, resulting in either gross over or underexposure.
In photography, some cameras include exposure compensation as a feature to allow the user to adjust the automatically calculated exposure.
This is why practically every auto-exposure camera ever made has an extra control for "exposure compensation" - it overrides the meter's automatic mistakes.
Cinematographers may also apply exposure compensation for changes in shutter angle or film speed (as exposure index), among other factors.
In scenes with very unusual lighting, however, these metering systems sometimes cannot match the judgment of a skilled photographer, so exposure compensation still may be needed.
Since shooting multiple exposures will expose the same frame multiple times, negative exposure compensation must first be set to avoid overexposure.
Many current cameras allow for exposure compensation, and usually state it in terms of EV (Ray 2000, 316).
Other features include subject tracking, orientation tracker, long time exposure, exposure compensation, a self-timer, and three quality levels for pictures it takes.