Originally Posted by
rpcrowe
I definitely use "A" priority when it is important for me to keep the aperture (and thus the DOF) constant. This is especially important when shooting images that are intended for compositing such as in panoramas and HDR imagery. I will pretty well use "A" mode in most other shooting.
IMO, it is really six or one or a half-dozen of another when shooting individual shots whether you use "A" or "P" - as long as you are cognizent of the parameters of your exposure such as ISO, aperture and shutter speed. It is easy to switch the parameters in either of the above modes.
However, when changing the exposure parameters when you have selected the "P" mode, the camera will revert back, in subsequent shots, to what it considered correct parameters before you changed those parameters. When changing shooting parameters in the "A" mode the camera will retain the parameters selected by you in all subsequent shots of the same scene.
This is quite advantageous when shooting multiple shots in the same general venue. For most of my shooting, I like to shoot at the sweet spot of my various lenses (usually 2-stops below maximum aperture). However, when I either need extra DOF or if I want a narrow DOF for selective focus, I will adjust the aperture accordingly. This is also true when I am shooting in dim light and need the fastest shutter speed possible, when I am shooting action and want the fastest shutter speed possible or when I want the slowest shutter speed possible.
However, when I am driving back roads with the high possibility that I will see some wildlife; I keep my camera within grasping distance (my wife is very willing to hold the camera for me when she is a passenger), I have the longest focal length at my disposal mounted, I have the ISO set at 320 (which will give me excellent results but is a bit better in low light than my usual ISO 160) AND... I will have the mode set at "P" because it will give me the highest chance at a usuable image for a quick, off-the-cuff, shot.