after reading 2 pages of TIFF seem nobody has the answer of when we shoot in TIFF?:think:
I onli know >>>
shoot RAW if your want to develop the image yourself
shoot tiff if you want the camera to develop the image but not compress it
but wat the real effect me also :angel::angel::angel:
Here is the google
JPG's main benefit is that it gives excellent compression
(small file sizes) with reasonable / acceptable compromises in image quality.
TIFF is lossless, JPG is lossy. It's pretty simple.
The TIFF can be looked at by any picture editing program, just like JPG.
There would be very, very little difference between a low compressed JPG
and a non compressed TIFF file.
The RAW file is as the camera captured the light, and must be extracted and
processed into a useful file type, but it gives more possibilities for the
pros and those who want to fiddle a lot with every picture.
With RAW, the settings may be saved but are not permanently applied to the image, and thus can be changed during post processing.
TIFF is a large, uncompressed file format that is only limited to 8 bits deep in all the cameras,
while raw is either 12-bit or 14-bit, depending on one's camera and or/capture mode preferences.
The greater bit depth of RAW files allows more extreme corrections before posterization occurs.
Apart from the advantages the others have mentioned, Raw files are
smaller (typically LOTS smaller) than TIFF files. So you should get
more on the memory card, they may write to the card faster, etc.