John Willis <jo...@mac.com> writes: > I can go to a nice park in San Diego and walk along a nice > highway=footway with my 68 year old mother and my friend in a > wheelchair and my little cousin on a push bicycle. Surface=dirt. > > Go try to do any of those on either path I linked. There were > (honestly) 60 year old ladies with little hats and hiking boots there, > with their trekking poles and goretex uppers, looking for birds, > delivered there by a tour bus . But there is no way that those routes > should have their differences *defined* by tags that can be used to > define a characteristic of any other tag. They have completely > different expectations of usage and conditions.
Earlier I objected to highway=trail, and I'd like to point out that it was in the context of the main/access discussion. The notion of highway=trail for being in a mostly natural area with a place you can walk highway=path (and footway/cycleway/bridleay) for being in a landscaped and managed area, or a walking area that is managed/landscaped through a natural area, where the walking you do is more like paved or really nice dirt surface seems mostly reasonable to me. But it's entirely separate from the main/not distinction and I think from the others. The other problems are While there are examples that sort neatly into these two cases, surely there are hard cases. That's not so bad, except that there are surely areas with some on either side of the line in no clearly-designed pattern, and it will be very messy to label them. OSM doesn't really deal well with this sort of tag splitting, because the renderers won't render until the tag is widely used, and no one will use it if it doesn't show up on the default render, mapquest, osmand, mkgmap, etc. I wonder if this is sort of like tracktype, which labels tracks in grades. I find that awkward because 1-5 doesn't mean much to me and I have to look it up every time. But overall I think that if we have have a path= city, wheelchair-ok, walker-ok, cane-ok, dress-shoes-ok sneakers-ok, hiking-boots-ok, boots-and-pole-ok, scrambling, technical-climbing sort of thing, that might address most of the issues in a backwards-compatible way. That's probably not the right list - just an example.
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