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  2. Electronic viewfinder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_viewfinder

    It differs from a live preview screen in being smaller and shaded from ambient light, and may also use less power. The sensor records the view through the lens, the view is processed, and finally projected on a miniature display which is viewable through the eyepiece. Digital viewfinders are used in digital still cameras and in video cameras ...

  3. Live preview - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_preview

    Live view on a Nikon D300. The lesser Autogain Framing/Focus Live preview, borrowed from framing/focus autogain live view digicams, in lesser autogain live view DSLRs does not typically serve as their principal means of framing and previewing before taking a photograph, with this function still being mainly performed with optical viewfinder.

  4. Digital single-lens reflex camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_single-lens_reflex...

    The translucent (transmissive) fixed mirror allows 70 per cent of the light to pass through onto the imaging sensor, meaning a 1/3rd stop-loss light, but the rest of this light is continuously reflected onto the camera's phase-detection AF sensor for fast autofocus for both the viewfinder and live view on the rear screen, even during the video ...

  5. Bridge camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_camera

    Bridge cameras employ two types of electronic screens as viewfinders: The LCD and the electronic viewfinder (EVF). All bridge cameras have an LCD with live-preview and usually in addition either an EVF or an optical viewfinder (OVF) (non-parallax-free, as opposed to the OVF of DSLRs, which is parallax-free). A high-quality EVF is one of the ...

  6. Mirrorless camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirrorless_camera

    The first digital rangefinder camera commercially marketed was the Epson R-D1 (released in 2004), followed by the Leica M8 in 2006. [16] They were some of the first digital lens-interchangeable cameras without a reflex mirror, but they are not considered mirrorless cameras because they did not use an electronic viewfinder for live preview, but, rather, an optical viewfinder. [16]

  7. Viewfinder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viewfinder

    In photography, a viewfinder is a device on a camera that a photographer uses to determine exactly where the camera is pointed, and approximately how much of that view will be photographed. A viewfinder can be mechanical (indicating only direction and approximate view), with simple optical components, with precision optics and optical functions ...

  8. Through-the-lens metering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Through-the-lens_metering

    In most film and digital SLRs, the light sensor(s) for exposure metering are incorporated into the pentaprism or pentamirror, the mechanism by which a SLR allows the viewfinder to see directly through the lens. As the mirror is flipped up, no light can reach there during exposure, the necessary amount of exposure needs to be determined before ...

  9. Point-and-shoot camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point-and-shoot_camera

    Many smaller digital point-and-shoots of the 2010s omit the viewfinder and use only the screen. With SLR cameras, it is important that the image in the viewfinder be the same image recorded by the film or sensor, so that the effect of the add-on lenses and filters can be seen by the photographer. Point-and-shoot cameras generally don't have ...