From the footnote of that table:
"The United Kingdom Tagging Guidelines <https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_Tagging_Guidelines> state that highway=path, when used it the UK, implies "a generic narrow path that is used in conjunction with access tags". This makes the default "yes" assumption dubious."

What does foot=yes mean?
https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Path_examples
Some wiki pages say it's 'legal right' another says "A urban path without any legal status suitable for walking."

This is a reason why I take much of the wiki with a pinch of salt. 'foot=yes' should be used in combination with the access tag (usually when it's  set to 'no' or 'private') not as a stand alone sub tag (ie highway=footway;foot=yes).

Are there any data users who use 'highway=footway;foot=yes' to distinguish from other footways?

DaveF


On 15/03/2019 11:05, David Woolley wrote:
On 15/03/2019 01:24, Dave F via Talk-GB wrote:
AFAIA, neither tag had any impied permissions or condition attributes.

They do, and they are country specific.

<https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OSM_tags_for_routing/Access-Restrictions#United_Kingdom>



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