Re: [Tagging] different access restrictions for different entrances to an area

2011-10-28 Thread Bryce Nesbitt

On 10/26/2011 05:49 AM, Anthony wrote:

The part about "once you're inside..." is, in my opinion, a red
herring.  Once you're inside, the assumption is that you must have had
permission to be there in order to have gotten there.  This is true of
any access=private road I can think of.

There could be multiple exit gates, some that anyone can exit through,
some of which require a code or clicker.
-Bryce

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Re: [Tagging] different access restrictions for different entrances to an area

2011-10-28 Thread Anthony
On Fri, Oct 28, 2011 at 10:53 AM, Bryce Nesbitt  wrote:
> On 10/26/2011 05:49 AM, Anthony wrote:
>>
>> The part about "once you're inside..." is, in my opinion, a red
>> herring.  Once you're inside, the assumption is that you must have had
>> permission to be there in order to have gotten there.  This is true of
>> any access=private road I can think of.
>
> There could be multiple exit gates, some that anyone can exit through,
> some of which require a code or clicker.

The access tag on the road (the way) is separate from the access tag
on the gate (the node).  The former refers to who can use the road.
The latter refers to who can open the gate.

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Re: [Tagging] different access restrictions for different entrances to an area

2011-10-28 Thread Anthony
On Fri, Oct 28, 2011 at 12:56 PM, Anthony  wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 28, 2011 at 10:53 AM, Bryce Nesbitt  wrote:
>> On 10/26/2011 05:49 AM, Anthony wrote:
>>>
>>> The part about "once you're inside..." is, in my opinion, a red
>>> herring.  Once you're inside, the assumption is that you must have had
>>> permission to be there in order to have gotten there.  This is true of
>>> any access=private road I can think of.
>>
>> There could be multiple exit gates, some that anyone can exit through,
>> some of which require a code or clicker.
>
> The access tag on the road (the way) is separate from the access tag
> on the gate (the node).  The former refers to who can use the road.
> The latter refers to who can open the gate.

Granted, this does raise issues.  Besides the fact that oneway=yes on
a barrier=gate is not well defined, there isn't, to my knowledge, a
way to distinguish "requires code or clicker which is given to
residents" from "only accessible by maintenance personnel (and
possibly emergency services)".  And both seem to me to be a somewhat
common situation.

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