I did read the description closely, and what I said still applies: in
Portugal it is a fountain in the way it is described in Britain, an
amenity=fountain with no drinking water.
That's what I'm trying to explain from the beginning: it doesn't matter
if it has drinking water or not, it will always be a fountain. But in
the cases (the majority of them) that they have, we should be allowed to
apply the drinking_water=yes, regardless if in Britain that's not the case.
This way, everyone is happy: you still call it fountain in Britain, and
I still call it fountain in Spain, Italy, France, Portugal or wherever,
with the difference that the chance of them having potable water is higher.


Às 16:02 de 06/02/2020, Paul Allen escreveu:
On Thu, 6 Feb 2020 at 18:10, António Madeira <antoniomade...@gmx.com
<mailto:antoniomade...@gmx.com>> wrote:


    If you come to Portugal and want to find drinkin water, you should
    know that most fountains have drinking water, like I need to know
    the opposite when I go to the UK.


But OSM maps can be viewed from anywhere in the world by people planning
trips.  It's better that tags mean the same thing everywhere. 
Otherwise you
have to check what each country means by each tag.

    Yes, that example in Portugal that's a fountain (a
    decorative/historic)


If you had read the description closely, you'd have been able to work
out that
it was originally a decorative drinking fountain. Current legislation
means that
the water is no longer considered potable so it is now just a
decorative fountain.

    If it says not do drink water from it, we simply use
    amenity=fountain. Like you.

    Only if it has potable water we could add drinking_water=yes.


That's all I was ever saying: amenity=fountain doesn't imply the water is
drinkable because the tag values are in British English. If it also
supplies
drinking water then add drinking_water=yes.  If there is no drinking_water
tag then the default is that it is not drinkable.  That way we have a
standard
way of tagging things.

You may also need to make use of drinking_water:legal=no on some
fountains.  I wouldn't use it myself because it implies the water is
drinkable but not certified as drinkable and I'd be worried about the
legal consequences of making such a claim.

--
Paul


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