back in the day, you would set the ASA on your camera's meter (or hand-held) to give it some reference to the sensitivity of your film. it would then give an indicated exposure for that film 'speed'...
on my AE-1, and on the other 'automatic' cameras, there was an exposure compensation button that would alter the actual exposure settings by 1-1/2 stops (i THINK)...
this is how i understood it. what ever light you had and what ever film speed you had dialed in might give you an exposure combination of f5.6 and 1/125 of a second. if you then hit the button it would cause the aperture to be closed to only f3.2 resulting in a 1-1/2 stop increase in exposure. correct?
with the DSLRs does dialing in EV compensation alter the aperture (or shutter speed depending on shooting mode selected) does it alter the ISO setting (behind the scenes) or does it just screw with the sensors sensitivity?
i shot some hockey over the weekend and dialed in an extra 2/3 stop but i didnt pay any attention to whether or not it had any impact on my aperture (shooting Tv mode)...
just curious...

