Hi,

Etienne, where does the osmconf file come from? Is it a default file in
QGIS (v3) installation or something added when installing the QuickOSM
plugin?
I mean should the aforementioned option 4 have returned the data in a
""flat"" shape (a key <-> a field), as does QuickOSM by default?

Thanks,
Harrissou


2018-07-24 15:45 GMT+02:00 matteo <[email protected]>:

> Hey,
> > When you have your .osm file on your computer (eg downloaded from
> > outside QGIS), you can open it with:
> > * QuickOSM with the default parser, each keys will have their own fields.
> > * QuickOSM with your custom osmconf.ini file. The attribute table is
> > defined according to your osmconf file.
> > * OSM core importer in QGIS 2, not sure about the final attribute table.
> > * QGIS, loading a normal vector file. The osmconf file on your computer
> > will be used to define the attribute table.
> >
> > So it seems you are using the last option, right? So maybe you modified
> > the default osmconf file?
>
> it seems so. Never touched the osmconf file (almost a fresh Debian Sid
> OS). It just seems strange to me that the "default" parser (the last one
> of the list) is lossy (meaning that many columns can collapse into a
> single not usable one).
>
> Anyway: QuickOSM parser works like a charm ;)
>
> Thanks to all
>
> Matteo
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