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BTW, I have tripped the shutter inadvertently on a number of film cameras. It is not reserved for the digital world.
That is a very, very common, irritating thing! I've done it with pinhole cameras. An Olympus XA...my phone...
Everybody has tripped the shutter by accident, even me, the most recent being in June (winter here Downunder)!
I fumbled in minus 3°c temperatures in a redwood forest; instead of carefully inserting the cable release, I inadvertently pressed the shutter — twice! So two botched frames at the start. The shutter on Pentax 67 cameras is lockable; fogged and misted over, I failed to check its status on that occasion. To add insult to injury, the grand old Pentax 67 does not perform well in very cold conditions, with a lazy wind-on lever return and very stiff advance. After four frames, I was outta there and seeking a cosy log fire, yummo donuts and a croissant at the Store 43km away...
The grist of my gripes is spending minutes, hours chimping at the LCD as the scene before you is constantly changing — deleting, changing myriad settings (don't forget eye control focus...) reshooting, etc., that makes no sense to me. In that regard, settings, composition, lighting, exposure etc should be nutted out in your head, and transferred to the camera. Digi cams have dulled our intelligence.. Just as Ai is making inroads into doing.
Spend as much time in the darkroom as you wish. As an asthmatic, I hate the places. As a matter of policy, I don't spend hours at the computer in post; automating brightness to match the loss of brightness at the scan-step is all that is usually required, additional to screen and print profiling; it is very quick.