2013/1/23 Serge Wroclawski
> On Wed, Jan 23, 2013 at 4:32 AM, Janko Mihelić wrote:
> > It shouldn't be too hard to make a JOSM add-on that converts 3 letters
> into
> > 2. So that's no problem.
>
> You seem to be not seeing the point.
>
> Two letter days of the week (DOW) may be standard in Germ
I don't think three letters is quite as universal as you think. It's also
really common in English to use M,T,W,T,F,S,S (in context) or
M,Tu,W,Th,F,Sa,Su or variations. Since we have a defacto OSM standard with
two letters (the opening_hours key has over 100K uses), and it's
unambiguous, this see
On Wed, Jan 23, 2013 at 4:32 AM, Janko Mihelić wrote:
> It shouldn't be too hard to make a JOSM add-on that converts 3 letters into
> 2. So that's no problem.
You seem to be not seeing the point.
Two letter days of the week (DOW) may be standard in German, and
that's fine. But the tags we use in
It shouldn't be too hard to make a JOSM add-on that converts 3 letters into
2. So that's no problem.
How about those time domains? Could we use them to map temporary closed
roads?
Janko
___
Tagging mailing list
Tagging@openstreetmap.org
http://lists.ope
On my Ubuntu Linux machine, the default calendar uses 3 letters for days of the
week. --ceyockey
-Original Message-
>From: Eckhart Wörner
>Sent: Jan 22, 2013 11:43 AM
>To: "Tag discussion, strategy and related tools"
>Subject: Re: [Tagging] Follow-up on Time Doma
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 11:43 AM, Eckhart Wörner wrote:
> nobody else?
> Windows Vista:
> http://www.askdavetaylor.com/1-blog-pics/vista-date-time-pop-up.png
> Windows 7: http://www.homeandlearn.co.uk/bc/win7/taskbar/changeDateTime.gif
> Windows 8:
> http://www.liberiangeek.net/wp-content/uploa
Hi Serge,
Am Dienstag, 22. Januar 2013, 06:51:29 schrieb Serge Wroclawski:
> Except why use abbreviations that no one uses elsewhere?
>
> I've never seen two letter abbreviations for days of the week outside
> OSM, in any computer system.
>
> So why use a codification that no one else uses, to s
2013/1/22 Peter Wendorff :
> Am 22.01.2013 12:51, schrieb Serge Wroclawski:
>
>> Except why use abbreviations that no one uses elsewhere? I've never seen
>> two letter abbreviations for days of the week outside OSM, in any computer
>> system. So why use a codification that no one else uses, to save
Am 22.01.2013 12:51, schrieb Serge Wroclawski:
Except why use abbreviations that no one uses elsewhere? I've never
seen two letter abbreviations for days of the week outside OSM, in any
computer system. So why use a codification that no one else uses, to
save a byte?
Probably that's once more a
On 1/22/13 6:57 AM, Martin Vonwald wrote:
2013/1/22 Serge Wroclawski :
So why use a codification that no one else uses, to save a byte?
Because it is used? Even pretty often - at least in my perception.
i use it when i encode times for OSM because it's the documented
method in the wiki right
2013/1/22 Serge Wroclawski :
> On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 5:32 AM, Andrew Errington
> wrote:
>> Surely this is 'internal'. That is, it's nice that some people can read Mo,
>> Tu, We, etc., but for others, they are just 'coded' days of the week. Date
>> producers need to understand the meaning of M
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 5:32 AM, Andrew Errington wrote:
> Surely this is 'internal'. That is, it's nice that some people can read Mo,
> Tu, We, etc., but for others, they are just 'coded' days of the week. Date
> producers need to understand the meaning of Mo, Tu, etc. so that they can
> recor
On Tue, 22 Jan 2013 06:36:57 Serge Wroclawski wrote:
> > there have been some minor additions resulting in an updated spec.
>
> The one comment I have is that I'm not at all used to seeing two
> letter days of the week.
>
> I've always seen them as Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur, Fri, Sat, Sun.
>
> This is ob
On 1/21/13 4:36 PM, Serge Wroclawski wrote:
there have been some minor additions resulting in an updated spec.
The one comment I have is that I'm not at all used to seeing two
letter days of the week.
I've always seen them as Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur, Fri, Sat, Sun.
This is obviously cultural, but
> there have been some minor additions resulting in an updated spec.
The one comment I have is that I'm not at all used to seeing two
letter days of the week.
I've always seen them as Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur, Fri, Sat, Sun.
This is obviously cultural, but we want these to be as "natural" as possible
Hi everybody,
Am Sonntag, 20. Januar 2013, 15:16:14 schrieb Eckhart Wörner:
> The latest version of the proposal is here:
> http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposed_features/Time_domains
there have been some minor additions resulting in an updated spec.
Here is the list of opening_hours valu
Hi Richard,
Am Sonntag, 20. Januar 2013, 09:46:37 schrieb Richard Welty:
> "Generating results, this may take some time..."
>
> how long does this normally take?
it downloads some data, then processes it using JavaScript.
Here is a static version:
http://eckhart-woerner.de/~eckhart/time/time-st
Hi Serge,
Am Sonntag, 20. Januar 2013, 10:00:11 schrieb Serge Wroclawski:
> The Microformats community seems to be going through a similar
> process: http://microformats.org/wiki/opening-hours
>
> The funny part is that they use our current spec as an example of
> opening hours done right.
I fai
On Sun, Jan 20, 2013 at 9:16 AM, Eckhart Wörner wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> last year, I started an RFC to properly define time domains. Unfortunately,
> due to lack of time I wasn't able to follow-up on this. I would like to
> revive the discussion.
>
> The latest version of the proposal is here
On 1/20/13 9:16 AM, Eckhart Wörner wrote:
Hi everybody,
last year, I started an RFC to properly define time domains. Unfortunately, due
to lack of time I wasn't able to follow-up on this. I would like to revive the
discussion.
The latest version of the proposal is here:
http://wiki.openstree
20 matches
Mail list logo