@Boris_yo no, only shutter speed impacts bluriness
delay only impacts if the photo occurs when you want to
for example, if you had a fast shutter and a long delay and you tried to take a picture of someone jumping, you'd get a clear photo of them standing on the ground
if you have a slow shutter and a short delay, then you'd have a blurry photo of someone jumping because it would take the photo right away, but the shutter would be open exposing the image for too long
@Boris_yo - I think you need to read up a bit more on the exposure triangle
either we are having a serious language barrier or your understanding of exposure is very fundamentally wrong somewhere
for a photo to come out, it needs enough light to hit the sensor. You can adjust the amount of light hitting the sensor/the amount of light needed in 3 ways
you can adjust ISO (sensitivity). Low ISO (64 or even 100) will make the image very dark, but very little noise. High ISOs will make the sensor very sensitive (need less light) but will have more noise in images
shutter speed determines how long the camera collects light for
the longer it is open, the more light the camera gathers, but the more blur there is from either the camera or subject moving
it is measured as the amount of seconds that the shutter is open
so 1/10 lets in more light than 1/100
but has more issues with blurring
and then there is aperture, which is how big the opening light is let in through
the wider the aperture (smaller f/ number), the more light is let in, but the shallower the depth of field (how much of the image is in focus)
the narrower the aperture (larger f/ number) the less light is let in, but the wider the depth of field (larger range of distances from the camera are in focus) but also quality will eventually suffer from something called difraction limiting, which reduces overall sharpness at high apertures
exposure compensation doesn't do anything by itself, it just tells the camera that it should adjust how much light it thinks it needs
which just impacts how the camera chooses ISO, Shutter Speed and Aperture