Maybe just tag network=nfn then? Can be applied in any country. Details see oprator and ref.
How two distinguish two roads hundreds of miles away from each other? Hm... that is a hard question... Mvg Peter Elderson > Op 13 jul. 2020 om 00:33 heeft Clay Smalley <claysmal...@gmail.com> het > volgende geschreven: > > >> On Sun, Jul 12, 2020 at 3:08 PM Peter Elderson <pelder...@gmail.com> wrote: >> I still don't understand why you tag "US" while it's obviously a bunch of >> roads in the US. or Interstate when the road clearly crosses state lines. I >> think that"s more redundant than tagging "we classify this route as a >> regional route", even though it might cross two national borders in a few >> places and half the roads are outside our borders, and we don't know the >> current operator or provider. > > Because they are two separate networks with roughly the same geographical > scope. How would you distinguish Interstate 30 from US Route 30, which are > hundreds of miles away from each other? > > Some Interstate highways do not cross state lines themselves, but the idea > behind the name is that the network as a whole does. Regardless, that's just > the name for our national freeway network. > > -Clay > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > Tagging@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging
_______________________________________________ Tagging mailing list Tagging@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging