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Unless I have to shot a person or an object which moves, I set my camera to use only one focus point at the middle.

It feels just more natural and so easy: when I need to focus on something which is not in the center of the photo, I start by focusing on it, then move my camera to take a shot. When doing otherwise, I failed to capture numerous moments because of the camera deciding to focus somewhere else.

On the other hand:

  • My Nikon D7000 has 39 focus points, and newer and more expensive cameras have even more. Also, the factory settings are to keep all the available focus points active, including, I believe, on professional cameras such as Nikon D4.

  • I often see people doing DSLR reviews keeping all the focus points active.

  • Ken Rockwell suggests keeping the default auto-focus settings, highlighting the fact that the camera figures very well which point should be used to focus.

Have I misunderstood how to use properly all auto-focus points settings? What could explain that I find it much easier to use a single focus point, while it's not the case for many people?

Arseni Mourzenko
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  • Be aware that focusing on the center point then moving the camera can cause issues with accuracy 2. Be aware that Ken's website is for entertainment purposes only.
  • – dpollitt Jul 17 '14 at 22:17
  • That's what I do. I have no idea why modern cams have so many focus points. It's true that focus/recompose does introduce a slight error; but it's negligible unless you're doing macro work. – user4894 Jul 17 '14 at 23:43
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    I think the flagged duplicates address why you would manually select an alternate focus point - not the middle one, where this questions is about letting the camera use its many focus points and do the selection? – MikeW Jul 17 '14 at 23:49
  • On Ken Rockwell and entertainment vs. facts, see http://photo.stackexchange.com/questions/10980/are-equipment-reviews-from-websites-like-kenrockwell-com-and-bythom-com-reliable – mattdm Jul 25 '14 at 22:39