On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 2:32 PM, Peter Wendorff <wendo...@uni-paderborn.de> wrote: > Am 26.10.2010 20:00, schrieb Anthony: >> >> Right, that's where the 99%/1% thing comes into place. I don't think >> it's true that 100% of stop signs face opposite the nearest >> intersection. So there has to be a tag for those exceptions. >> >> Now, you could say that the tag is only needed for those exceptional >> cases. But then you still need editor support for those exceptional >> cases. > > Perhaps you are right - but please, can you give me an example? > I cannot imagine why there should be a stop sign without intersection. > AFAIK a stop sign tells you: the others have right of way, and you > additionally have to stop here before you are allowed to join the > intersection. > I don't see any situation, where a stop sign is used as a stop sign (and not > for decoration) without an intersection near to it.
I don't know about a stop sign, but there are places where a two-lane road narrows to one lane for a short distance and a yield sign is posted. _______________________________________________ Tagging mailing list Tagging@openstreetmap.org http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging