Exactly. Precise exposure is just as important in digital photography as it is 
in film photography, even though it may be easier to disguise your mistakes. 
The best exposure for a RAW digital image can vary slightly from what might be 
best for film photography, just as ideal negative film exposure might be half a 
stop different than an ideal positive film exposure in some cases. Similarly, 
an ideal jpeg exposure in digital might differ slightly from an ideal RAW 
exposure in some cases. But in every case, exposure is important. And as with 
film, determining what works best for your style of shooting and workflow 
requires some testing.
Paul


> On Mon, May 23, 2005 at 10:24:59AM -0400, David Zaninovic wrote:
> > That's right, if you shoot raw and you captured all the info who cares 
> > about 
> the exposure, you can change exposure during raw
> > converting process and the result will be identical as if you compensated 
> > the 
> exposure correctly at the time of shooting.
> 
> No it won't.
> 
> In particular, you'll see addional quantisation in the shadows.
> 

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