On Sun, 2026-07-12 at 20:43 +0300, Mehmet Gürevin wrote:
> Hi Holger,
> 
> Thanks for your response.
> 
> I agree that Turkey is a special case geographically. A large majority of its 
> landmass is indeed located in Asia, so I understand why it was placed there.
> 
> My concern is not primarily whether Turkey should be considered European or 
> Asian, but rather the consistency of the grouping presented by the installer.
> 
> For example, Cyprus is listed under Europe even though it is geographically 
> located entirely in Asia, and Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia are also 
> grouped under Europe despite their similarly ambiguous or transcontinental 
> status.
> 
> Given these existing classifications, Turkey appears to be treated 
> differently from other countries in the same region.
> 
> If the intention is to group countries by physical geography,

...then we should use a 6-continent model with Eurasia instead of Europe
and Asia.  (semi-serious)

> then several existing entries might deserve reconsideration. If the intention 
> is instead to follow political, cultural, or user-expectation criteria, then 
> placing Turkey under Europe would also be consistent with the surrounding 
> entries.
> 
> So my suggestion is less about Turkey itself, and more about applying the 
> same rationale consistently across all borderline cases.
[...]

I don't think it's possible to achieve a consistent and understandable
rule that maps each country to exactly one continent.  It seems this
might best be resolved by changing to a many-to-many mapping.

Ben.


-- 
Ben Hutchings
If the facts do not conform to your theory, they must be disposed of.

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