My understanding (and experience) is that digital has a lot of latitude for underexposure, but blocks up fast with overexposure; film is the opposite, more or less (but obviously this depends on the film).
Nothing much to do with the original question!
exactly, with film you expose for the shadows because the worse thing you can do is not give enough exposure. With digital, it’s the exact opposite, you expose for the highlights because the worst thing you can do is give too much exposure. If shooting raw, digital has a lot of dynamic range, if you know how to expose for it and post process it. Heck, even the little Canon EOS RP, which by modern sensor tech standards has atrocious dynamic range easily clears 11+ stops of usable dynamic range, and pretty much every other modern sensor bests it by at least 2 or 3 stops for a total of 13-14+. Again, if you shoot jpeg and insist on exposing like you would film, it’s easy to be disappointed and claim that digital has very little dynamic range, or is like slide film. This is why it has a different zone system. Zone 10 is sensor clip, which puts zone five 5 stops down, which if using the camera meter, is not actually where the camera meters for, believe it or not. And people wonder why it’s confusing.