On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 4:41 PM, Lester Caine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Robert (Jamie) Munro wrote: > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > > Hash: SHA1 > > > > Lester Caine wrote: > > | Mark Williams wrote: > > |> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > > |> Hash: SHA1 > > |> > > |> Lester Caine wrote: > > |>> J.D. Schmidt wrote: > > |>>> Lester Caine skrev: > > |> [big snip] > > |> > > |>> LOGICALLY - there should never have been a problem created. A POI > > element > > |>> should consist of a single entity which may have additional area > > information. > > |>> Even those tags that are currently only defined as 'node' in many > > cases WILL > > |>> be expanded to include area information at some point. So PLEASE can > > we have > > |>> some sensible method of identifying PAIRS of tags so we can THEN > > decide what > > |>> to do with them !!! > > |>> > > |> Is this not a job for relations? If the pair were related, then we have > > |> no problem? > > | > > | Correct - but how do you identify elements uniquely so you can create the > > | relation? > > > > I'm not quite sure what you mean, but to try to bring this back onto > > topic, if you mean "How do we find amenity=parking nodes that are > > duplicates of areas?" the answer is that we find all the nodes inside > > areas. If there are any that are just outside, we will miss them, whici > > is annoying, but not the end of the world. In order to find them, we can > > use a Simple postGIS query as suggested by Dave Stubbs (which I have > > attempted to reformat a bit): > > > > select p.osm_id > > ~ from planet_osm_point as p, > > ~ planet_osm_polygon as a > > where a.osm_id!=p.osm_id > > ~ and a.osm_id in ( > > ~ select a.osm_id from planet_osm_point as p, planet_osm_polygon as a > > ~ where a.amenity='parking' > > ~ and p.amenity='parking' > > ~ and a.way && p.way > > ~ and intersects(a.way, p.way) > > ~ group by a.osm_id > > ~ having count(p.osm_id) > 1 > > ~ ) > > ~ and p.amenity='parking' > > ~ and a.way && p.way > > ~ and intersects(a.way,p.way); > > This will only work for the specific case where there is a single matching > node that goes with the area, and I believe it will be time intensive when > processing a large area. I don't believe there is any mechanism to create > a.osm_id = p.osm_id - these will always have different id's? If they HAD > matching id's them there would not be a problem. >
Oh, and it takes about 30 seconds for the entire imported planet. _______________________________________________ talk mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/talk

