Hi Geoff, Looks good. I've created a relation and added the ways to it. You should also add junctions or bridges everywhere it crosses a road or the river. I didn't want to do that because I wasn't sure which were bridges and which were crossings.
Steve On Wed, Dec 30, 2009 at 1:46 PM, Geoff <[email protected]> wrote: > Thank You Steve and John > > I think I did it correctly please have a look at the "Warragul Linear > Trail" http://www.bawbawshire.vic.gov.au/Page/page.asp?Page_Id=1166&h=0pdf > download from there. I have not completed surveying the whole trail but > that will come. Along with the others in the region as I get the family on > the bike and outside. > > Geoff > > > Steve Bennett wrote: > > > > On Tue, Dec 29, 2009 at 10:42 PM, John Smith <[email protected]>wrote: > >> 2009/12/29 Geoff <[email protected]>: >> > Hi Steve >> > >> > I am busy trying to get to understand how to connect the bits in a >> relation. >> > Not getting far but I want to read a bit more before I ask teh dumb >> > questions here. >> >> I can't tell you in potlatch, but it's dead simple in JOSM, you just >> select them and then bring up the relation panel (Alt+R) and click on >> the new relation button (button on the bottom left side of the panel), >> and you just fill in the bits, I don't know about cycle relations as I >> haven't tagged them but I'm guessing the type=route. >> > > Just look at existing bike paths that use relations, like in Melbourne. > This explains it, I think: > http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:rcn > > Use the "rcn" key. It's pretty straightforward in potlatch, there are so > many buttons you can press before you hit the right one. You create the > relation, then add each way to it. Again, look at existing bike paths to see > what it looks like. > > > Steve > >
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