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Kinda disagree with that. If you don't already have a manual camera to use, you get to buy one that you'll quickly outgrow. With a film camera, the gratification is delayed, plus there's the expense of film and processing, and you'd need to write down your shutter speed and aperture settings to learn, which is a PITA. A DSLR will record that information for you in your image file, and you can set your camera to manual and experiment around with the ISO (sensitivity), shutter speed, and aperture. You can take hundreds of pictures for free, then erase your memory card after you've transferred them to your computer.
I'd basically suggest going straight to digital. It can allow you to be lazy, but it can also help you learn more quickly how things work.
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