Hey Ben and others,

Yep, spot on, rendering hints but only related to zoom levels. I realise that 
it's matter of opinion what roads to be rendered at what levels etc and why 
rendering hints are not considered "factual data" and not preferred.

Changing the road classification is an option but are likely to cause side 
effects. For example, tagging what is a territory road as a primary so that it 
will be rendered earlier on in the zoom level has the potential of polluting 
the data, making it less useful for other purposes such as routing etc. 

Another positive of the rendering hints approach is that the tags themselves 
are completely optional so it's up to the rendering engine to take advantage of 
them. If ignored, it's like they

Also these tags are only really needed in more regional / outback areas, such 
as the Great central rd, Tanami track, French line etc so it's lightweight and 
won't add much size to the database.

I plan to start a new project for mapping off road and regional areas of 
Australia and these rendering hints will certainly make a huge difference in 
rendering. There are already quiet a few of interested in this project and was 
planning to start a new project page on the Aus Wiki to coordinate this effort. 
We were hoping to include the rendering tags among the guild line and hope you 
guys agree.

Li


On 01/11/2012, at 3:31 PM, Ben Kelley wrote:

> Hi.
> 
> I think tagging for the renderer is a bad idea.
> 
> Essentially you are talking more about render hints, but I think that becomes 
> a matter of preference pretty fast. Especially when OSM data can be rendered 
> in a number of ways.
> 
> I think it is worth considering what about a road makes you want to render it 
> as a different type of road.
> 
>   - Ben Kelley.
> On Nov 1, 2012 3:01 PM, "Li Xia" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hey everyone, have an idea about map rendering and want to get your thoughts.
> 
> One of the challenges is in rendering a useful map for recreational use is 
> displaying roads, tracks, trails and to some degree water lines at 
> appropriate zoom levels in more remote regions where the density is lower 
> compared with urban regions.
> 
> In my opinion, most map service online services or offline vector engine 
> experience the same issue. Here are some illustrations of the issue, by 
> comparing Google / OSM / Raster map of the same region:
> 
> Google
> 
> OSM
> 
> Raster map
> 
> As you can clearly see, at that zoom level, there's no deal on either OSM or 
> Google maps, where as the raster map is useful. yes you can zoom in on Google 
> or OSM, but with a smaller viewing port, orientation is more difficult and 
> you loose that overview which is try handy for trip planning.
> 
> By using a tag specific for rendering purposes, this issue can be overcome. 
> Rendering engines can take advantage of these tags to "optimise" rendering of 
> various regions.
> 
> The tags are fairly self explanatory. By tagging a road with render_as:trunk, 
> this feature can be rendered at the same zoom level as a trench road. Each 
> class of road will have it's own tag so if a highway:territory should be 
> rendered at the same zoom level as a primary, then tag render_as:tertiary.
> 
> What do you guys think?
> 
> Cheers 
> 
> Li.
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Talk-au mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-au
> 

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