> > But yes - what do you do if a rain route goes through a station, where the > rails temporarily split into several tracks? Where is the stop position for > that route? Clearly in that case stop_positions on the route cannot be > associated with platforms in the station, and full routing is not possible. >
However, I would say that each platform should still have a stop_position (on the rails) - even though those stop_positions might not be in route relations... Bjoern > On 2017-05-10 18:59, Bjoern Hassler wrote: >> >> Hello again, >> >> In an osm:relation:route >> <https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/relation:route> (type=route, >> route=train/...), you have both platforms and stop positions. How is a >> particular platform associated with a stop that serves it? >> >> E.g. for public transport routing, you'd walk (highway=footway) to a >> platform (public_transport=platform), at which point you'd change to a >> train stopping at a stop (public_transport=stop_position). How would the >> routing algorithm know that the platform is associated with the stop? >> >> Is there an existing mechanism or convention, e.g. a tag on the platform >> that indicates the stop, or both tagged with the same name or similar? >> >> Thanks! >> Bjoern >> >> PS I've noticed that sometimes the stop position is at the far end of a >> platform (i.e. the two stop positions are at opposite ends of the station). >> Maybe that's so that an association can be made? >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Tagging mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Tagging mailing >> [email protected]https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Tagging mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >> >> >
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