Care to enlighten me?
I may ask for a tutorial
Loads of stuff on google re histograms, like the Luminous Landsacpe link above, or this one
http://www.sekonic.com/images/files/HistogramsLightmetersWorkTogether.pdf It really is God's gift for optimum exposure.
Some purists will hate me for this, but I really think exposure metering is so easy with digital. You don't need to write a whole flippin book about it! Use evalutative/matrix metering (it's very clever) and it will get you pretty close under all but the most unusual situations. Much of the time it will be spot on. Enable blinkies - that is the flashing warning on the LCD of over exposed highlights. Learn to read to histogram. Use +/- exposure compensation to bring the exposure level in line with an optimum histogram. That's all there is to it.
Bear in mind that the sensor can only handle a limited range of brightness from light to dark. Rule of thumb is about 7-8 stops, ie 1:256 ratio maximum. Many typical scenes will be more than this, very much more if you have the sun near the frame, or even within it, and maybe some dark foregound shadows.
No camera can cope with these extremes (called the dynamic range) so you have to choose which range of tones is most important - the bright ones, the darker ones, or a compromise in the middle - and adjust the exposure level to slide the histogram left or right so that the 256 most important tones fall within its range.
Some people also believe that if you use spot metering, or an incident light reading, or some other technique that might have been useful shooting film, that you will somehow get a 'better' exposure. This is not true - they are just different ways of measuring the light in order to get as close as possible, as easily as possible - the result is the same. Digital shooting techniques make this unnecessary, but whatever works for you, use it.
In extreme situations, it is possible to compress the dynamic range, eg to darken a bright sky that would otherwise blow to pure white. Popular methods for that are a polarising filter, or a graduated filter, or HDR technique (High Dynamic Range) which inloves shooting several frames at different exposure levels and combining them in post production.