On Wednesday, 23 October 2019, Florian Lohoff wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 23, 2019 at 09:24:30AM +0000, Philip Barnes wrote:
> > On Wednesday, 23 October 2019, Jez Nicholson wrote:
> > > So, for those who like definitions: In the UK, a "mini roundabout" is
> > > simply a small roundabout that is either flush to the road or slightly
> > > raised so that large/long vehicles are able drive over it if they need to.
> > > If it has anything on it, like a lamp post, it is a "roundabout". It is 
> > > not
> > > the size, it is the being able to drive over it that matters
> > > https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/561491/mini-roundabouts-report.pdf
> > >
> > There is also the rule that you should not do U turns at mini roundabouts, 
> > so it is important that mapping retains this important distinction.
> > 
> > These are a very common feature, it does seem odd that routers are not 
> > supporting them.
> 
> The point is that a mini roundabout does need a LOT of preprocessing to
> put it into some graph for your classical A* or Dijkstra. You need to
> eliminate the node and replace it with a circular road much like a
> junction.
> 
Not really, a drivers brain does not process them in the same way as a large 
roundabout, with exit number/exit angle. You still go straight on or turn left 
or right.

In the case of OSMand it would simply need some slightly different turn 
graphics. For example the turn left with the blue mini-roundabout sign on it. 
The important one would be the missing instruction to go straight on.

 Phil (trigpoint)
-- 
Sent from my Sailfish device
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