On Tue, 2019-03-12 at 10:50 -0700, Johnparis wrote: > direction=clockwise/anticlockwise makes sense for a node (like a > miniroundabout), not for a way > > on a way, the common usage is "oneway=yes" and make sure the way > (which is by nature directional) is pointing the right direction. > > It doesn't make much sense for a hiking route to use "clockwise" (why > the "cw" abbreviation???) or "anticlockwise" ("ccw" is presumably an > abbreviation for the American English word "counterclockwise"). > Because those terms only make sense if the route is a closed loop > that doesn't self-intersect, have branches, or anything complicated. > > So "oneway=yes" solves all these cases quite simply. Avoid "oneway=- > 1" by the way, just use "oneway=yes" and reverse the direction of the > way if it's wrong. > > My two cents (from extensive work on bus routes, not hiking routes). > Although the oneway tag implies a legal restriction, and I doubt it is illegal to walk a hiking route in the 'wrong' direction.
I am gradually working my way along a local long distance hiking route and whilst I walk all the sections in order, I do not walk them all in the same direction as starting at a remote bus stop in the sticks is ok but not for finishing. Phil (trigpoint)
_______________________________________________ Tagging mailing list Tagging@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging