This thread points to the failing of many photographers, to ALWAYS BE AWARE of what your camera is doing whether it is on Manual or on any Automatic setting!
- If on Manual, you are ensuring that your exposure combination is resulting in the meter needle being 'ABOUT CENTERED', and if it is not centered at the time you KNOW WHY it is not centered to indicate what the meter thinks 'proper exposure' (because you are deliberately biasing for exposure compensation reasons) -- or you adjust it.
- If on Automatic, you are ensuring that whatever parameter which is under the camera control (e.g. shutter speed, as one example) is an acceptable one to you for the shot being taken.
- If on Automatic, you know that an EC value is cranked into the camera or not, and you understand why any EC for biasig the shot being metered is appropriate to the shot being taken.
- If using flash, you know that an FEC value is cranked into the camera or not, and you understand why any FEC for biasing the shot being flashed is appropriate to the shot being taken.
The key word is AWARENESS of the camera, and SUITABILITY of the settings to the shot being taken.
With awareness, you will at times detect that ...
- inadvertantly the camera blinking at you for under-/overexposure (even though it is in an automatic mode), because it is needing a parameter adjusted which currently out of its range.
- inadverantly the camera is using an aperture too big/small, a shutter speed too slow/fast, an ISO too high/low
- inadvertantly the camera meter is biased from an EC value 'left over' from another shot or because you simply bumped the control
- inadvertantly the camera meter is biased from an FEC value 'left over' from another shot or because you simply bumped the control
...and catch the Oops shots! Checking the histograms periodically is to cross check your AWARENESS, because we all have our "Oops, forgot to check (whatever)..." moments. When you shoot RAW, your shots will more often be 'about right' and needing only minor tweaks in postprocessing. When the 'Oops' is too large, adjusting RAW too much might fix the shot well enough to get by, but it will nevertheless be compromised in some way from optimum.
Just because the camera is on any automatic mode is not a reason for your BRAIN to be in OFF.
Always BE AWARE and in total control of your exposures to minimize the "Oops!" discovered long after it is too late to take a recovery shot.