I have noticed that there is a lot of change happening on the runway
wikipage.
Up to some months ago, the longstanding definition for a runway was:
"A strip of land kept clear and set aside for airplanes to take off from
and land on."
This was changed to "Runway of an airfield"
Another main aspe
Well, maybe there is someone who thinks mapping runway as area is wrong? I
think that both way and area are OK, because the way element matches the
way we map taxiways. So it is useful when others need to guide their plane
using osm data(maybe in flight simulator softwares). Mapping as area can
sho
On Mar 9, 2018 00:17, "Johnparis" wrote:
Typically they will, for example, sell detergent in boxes of 5 kg instead
of 1 kg. Or a liter of ketchup. Hence the (USA) term "big box". So they are
"wholesale-sized" but not wholesale in the sense of their sales mechanism.
(The wholesale=* tag is for who
On Mar 9, 2018 03:49, "Austin Zhu" wrote:
Well, maybe there is someone who thinks mapping runway as area is wrong? I
think that both way and area are OK, because the way element matches the
way we map taxiways. So it is useful when others need to guide their plane
using osm data(maybe in flight s
On Friday 09 March 2018, Martin Koppenhoefer wrote:
> I have noticed that there is a lot of change happening on the runway
> wikipage.
>
> Up to some months ago, the longstanding definition for a runway was:
> "A strip of land kept clear and set aside for airplanes to take off
> from and land on."
In Brazil some streets have a different postal code on each side.
There seems to be no officially defined tag to represent this on ways.
Nominatim supports [1] US TIGER tags tiger:zip_left and
tiger:zip_right, even though those could be replaced with postal code
boundary relations [2] in the future
On Mar 9, 2018 14:10, "Fernando Trebien" wrote:
In Brazil some streets have a different postal code on each side.
There seems to be no officially defined tag to represent this on ways.
Nominatim supports [1] US TIGER tags tiger:zip_left and
tiger:zip_right, even though those could be replaced wit
That is quite a common thing. I tag the buildings, or addressed nodes,
with the appropriate postcode. So building one side will have one
postcode and on the other side they will have a different postcode.
The postman doesn't deliver mail to the street and large users will
have their own postcode.
Le 09. 03. 18 à 21:08, Fernando Trebien a écrit :
> In Brazil some streets have a different postal code on each side.
the same happend in a lot of country.
in Belgium, they create postal_code boundary but Nominatim don't use
the location of the house, it use the location of the street witch is of
On Fri, Mar 9, 2018 at 8:08 PM, Fernando Trebien wrote:
> In Brazil some streets have a different postal code on each side.
> There seems to be no officially defined tag to represent this on ways.
> Nominatim supports [1] US TIGER tags tiger:zip_left and
> tiger:zip_right, even though those could
In the Netherlands having the same postal code on both sides of the
streets is a great exception. We always put all address information on
the individual address.
On Fri, Mar 9, 2018 at 9:08 PM, Fernando Trebien
wrote:
> In Brazil some streets have a different postal code on each side.
> There se
Oops, sent an earlier attempt from the wrong place:
TIGER:zip_left and zip_right were intended to be ZIP codes, because
they were there to help census workers find the houses who hadn't
returned census forms (which were sent out to postal addresses).
They were never entirely correct, though, and w
Likewise, not everywhere in America has a postal zipcode, but the Census
invented ones for their own purposes.
On Mar 9, 2018 16:13, "Kevin Kenny" wrote:
> Oops, sent an earlier attempt from the wrong place:
>
> TIGER:zip_left and zip_right were intended to be ZIP codes, because
> they were ther
Hi all,
OpenStreetMap Carto, the default stylesheet on openstreetmap.org, is
considering to change the mechanism for rendering admin boundaries.
The proposed rendering of admin borders will be based on admin
boundary ways rather than polygons. This has a number of advantages -
for example, it will
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