Exactly!!
I've rehearsed in my mind, and applied several times.
Small animals (squirrel, armadillo, rabbit), slow in a straight line with medium braking. If they get hit, sorry, but car/occupants uninjured. This happens multiple times a year.
Medium animals (dogs, goats, sheep) slow with medium to aggressive braking and steer a straight line to avoid if possible. If they get hit, sorry, but car has minor damage, occupants none. This happens every couple of years.
Large animals (deer, hogs, cows, horses) depends on potential....if hit is inevitable, brake immediately aggressively to put occupants into seat belts, then lock tires and let ABS do its job best it can and steer in straight line to collision (never had to execute). Animal damage depends on speed, but minimal possible, occupants suffer seat belt damage and straight stop forces, no rollover or into ditch because of evasive action, vehicle damage depends on speed of collision. If hit not inevitable, steer avoidance course but not aggressively, brake aggressively putting occupants against restraints, maintain steering control by not skidding tires/ABS unless hit becomes inevitable. In any case, NEVER steer aggressively to avoid, thus risking rollover or ditch, accept hit if reasonable avoidance effort is insufficiently effective..Further, NEVER enter oncoming lane if in traffic, but on rural road/no traffic, it's OK. This happens about every 5 years.
I will hit them with the car, pickup or tractor trailer though. I don't 'swerve' for deer, although I will 'steer clear' to avoid or lessen the impact if possible.
Shoot an albino...I dunno...where I hunt there are various types of exotics escaped from game ranches. If I saw one, a reasonable buck and shootable, I think I'd probably take it thinking it an exotic of some kind, or crossbred.