2010/9/19 SomeoneElse <li...@mail.atownsend.org.uk>: > On 19/09/2010 14:37, Nic Roets wrote: >> >> This is because a gate with no access tags >> implies that nothing can go through. > > It wouldn't to me - no access tags on the gate would imply to me that > nothing had been recorded
I agree with Andy here: no tags = no information. Which default is then implemented in a routing application depends on this application. To your question about a special tool: how would you know automatically which access restrictions apply? The example you pasted seems like bad mapping to me: a gate can't actually be directly on a bifurcation node. I would strongly recommend to tag it at it's real position, and if it's two gates (what would be a possible interpretation of your quoted example) then tag 2 separate gates. cheers, Martin _______________________________________________ talk mailing list talk@openstreetmap.org http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk