Yes, but that’s not the point.

 

The presence or absence of markings do not change the fundamental operating 
principle of the crossing (go only when it’s green).

 

The strips shown in the image you linked do not mean that pedestrians have 
priority here and can just walk across any time, no matter what the signal says.

 

The crossing would work exactly the same with and without these strips.

 

 

From: Simon Poole <si...@poole.ch> 
Sent: Saturday, 25 May 2019 20:25
To: tagging@openstreetmap.org
Subject: Re: [Tagging] Non-orthogonal crossing=* tag proposals: 
crossing=marked/unmarked vs crossing:markings=yes/no

 

 

Am 25.05.2019 um 02:18 schrieb Paul Allen:

 

+1 for "mutually exclusive."  Except, perhaps, in Poland.  I'm still waiting 
for an answer on that one.

 

 

Traffic signal controlled crossings with markings (including stripes of some 
colour) exist (not claiming that they are "common") at least all over central 
Europe (as pointed out in one of the contributions a couple of 100 postings 
back, they will typically control the vehicle traffic too). Random example 
https://www.mapillary.com/app/user/sp8962de?menu=false 
<https://www.mapillary.com/app/user/sp8962de?menu=false&focus=photo&lat=47.4040085&lng=8.39442809000002&z=15.17281376123384&signs=true&pKey=zL2pXJc6T_RffQheFsdbYA>
 
&focus=photo&lat=47.4040085&lng=8.39442809000002&z=15.17281376123384&signs=true&pKey=zL2pXJc6T_RffQheFsdbYA
 

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