>>4337211I use shutter priority a lot in low light, mainly. I either choose 1/focal length, or maybe like 1/125 if there are active subjects. Then I let camera take care of aperture (usually in these situations it's going to go wide open either way, or I'll slap it in M if I need to control depth of field) and auto boost ISO to get the necessary exposure.
When light isn't a constraint, it's basically aperture priority. Although sometimes for street I'll set it to shutter priority at 1/125 and the camera will automatically select the highest aperture at the lowest ISO it can to maximize depth of field considering the situation. Then if I see the aperture going above 13 or so (but I usually try to keep it between f/8 and f/11) it tells me to set my SS higher.
It feels pretty good. Don't worry about the exposure triangle (but keep it in mind so you don't end up with noisy images), set aperture or shutter speed according to conditions, not according to exposure.
> Putting PASM on a dial is a design sin that should be punished. At least put it on a switch and use the dial for something more productive like a dedicated ISO or exposure comp wheel.You'd like how the Leica X Vario handles this. No PASM dial. Instead you get a shutter speed dial and an aperture dial, each of which has an auto mode. (Setting them both to auto is effectively a program mode, but that makes more sense then making setting them both to auto an invalid combination for no good reason). Then you can choose ISO including Auto ISO.
You can also use the Auto ISO setting to let it choose auto ISO and auto SS, and set the slowest shutter speed (e.g. 1/125) it can select. I don't like to do that because I always forget to change it back then wonder why my ISO is too high in lower light. Neat feature tho.