Lots of tricks...mainly you need to worry going from cold air to warm humid air (like an AC room to Florida summer outdoors!). Putting the camera in a bag can help, as well as wrapping it in a towel when it's indoors. Dessicant also helps - buy some, or steal some from shoe boxes or other sources - put it in with the camera when coming indoors and storing it. However, fogging is a big problem even when you don't have much condensation or moisture - the inside of the camera stays very cool while the outside gets warm fast, and the lenses fog over badly.
My primary technique, living down here in Florida where cold-to-hot transitions are inevitable nearly every day, is to put out my cameras and lenses where they can be exposed to the heat and humidity about 5-10 minutes before I'm ready to leave. If at a hotel at Disney, for example, I'll put them on a balcony if I have one, or in the window where they get some direct sunlight. Any condensation that is going to temporarily fog up the camera has time to burn off before I need to start using the camera...as the inner parts that are cold slowly adjust and get warmer. Turn off the blasting cold air, let the camera be in the sun, open a door if need be...I've even gone down and placed my camera bag in my car at Port Orleans French Quarter because I had no balcony I could safely put my gear on and the sun wasn't reaching in the window...the car was hot, and I could lock it - and it was only 5-10 minutes while I was getting ready to leave.