Dear Eike,

Thanks for your amendment. I agree with your proposed improvements. I'll change 
the relevant part of the wiki and my recent pull request to match your tagging 
scheme proposal:
railway:signal:train_protection = NL:227b
railway:signal:train_protection:shape = triangle
I won't do this immediately; I'll do it as soon as this mail discussion had no 
new input for one week.

Best regards,
JJJWegdam


Op 22 januari 2021 om 17:42 uur schreef Michael Kümmling <[email protected]>:


Am 22.01.21 um 13:46 schrieb Rolf Eike Beer:

Am Dienstag, 19. Januar 2021, 22:49:52 CET schrieb JJJ Wegdam via
Openrailwaymap:
The Dutch national law
(https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0017707/2020-04-01 appendix 2, chapter 13)
allows two types of ETCS stop marker signs under the same signal reference
number:


This makes tagging a bit harder than usual. Normally we would just say:
railway:signal:train_protection = nl:227b


Because there are two types of signs I propose the tags:


railway:signal:train_protection = nl:227b_triangle
railway:signal:train_protection = nl:227b_arrow


In case we agree about this, I will proceed with changing the wiki and my
(currently 'paused') pull request.


I think this needs a bit more context. First, this is the PR he is talking
about: https://github.com/OpenRailwayMap/OpenRailwayMap/pull/701


It started with an innocent "let's add the ETCS stop marker rendering as used
in NL". But then I came up with this:


According to the German Wikipedia this is an older version of the signal
which has been replaced in newer versions of the ETCS standard because it
could be confused with a France signal of different meaning.


It looks like both are permitted in NL at the moment and this will not change
shortly:


The Netherlands has two ETCS level 2 trajectories (railway lines with ETCS
block markers). The high speed line between Amsterdam and Antwerp has (both
on Dutch and Belgian soil) the triangle-shaped signs. The cargo line from
Rotterdam to the Ruhrgebiet area has arrow-shaped signs. There are no plans
to change the triangle-shaped block marker boards on the high speed line.


My current solution is to use
"railway:signal:train_protection"="DE-ESO:ne14"on the Germany-bound line and
"railway:signal:train_protection"="NL:227b" on the Belgium-bound line.


And that is the point where I started to disagree:


Any tagging of DE-ESO signals on a railway line in the Netherlands is plain
wrong, this is just "tagging for the renderer".


So, the question is, what are we doing now. In my eyes the whole situation is
very similar to what we have regarding H/V light signals in Germany, where
there are at least 3 types all tagged the same as they have the same meaning,
they just differ in how they are built.


I would think adding another subtag like ":version", ":generation", ":shape"
or something for all of these cases, and then do something like


railway:signal:train_protection = nl:227b
railway:signal:train_protection:shape = triangle


Shouldn't this be NL instead?


railway:signal:main = DE-ESO:hp
railway:signal:main:form = light
railway:signal:main:shape = compact


The same also applies for the newer signals where entirely different shapes
are in use if mounted inside a tunnel or beneath a platform roof:


railway:signal:main = DE-ESO:ks
railway:signal:main:shape = tunnel


The advantage is that noone has to do case switching if the actual form of the
signal isn't relevant, e.g. when doing some sort of routing, you only need to
know there _is_ a signal. Renderers then can look at the subtags and decide to
use whatever default fits best if it is not present.
I support your proposal. If a signal has different variants, which share
the same number, name and meaning, it should have one value in OSM/ORM
as well.


Regards,
Micha

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