Feb 24, 2023, 00:43 by g...@lexort.com: > It's a little unclear to me what a "locked=no" gate is. > access=private locked=no would be a gate that anyone can open but they are not allowed to without a permission from owner. Personally I would consider mapping this as quite dubious. > foot=yes on a barrier=gate means that a person on foot can pass the > gate (perhaps by walking around it) with minimal difficulty, such that > the gate's presence should not affect routing > 1) if they can walk around it then map path around it 2) if they can but are not allowed to bypass it then it will not be foot=yes (also on path around it) https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/368814327 is an example of path where barriers can be bypassed but is illegal and dangerous to use (has signs mentioning how many people died there while illegally crossing railway tracks) > > barrier=gate locked=no (or no locked, default?) means that all modes > may physically pass, with a mode-specific typical cost > > > barrier=gate locked=yes means that all modes may not pass, unless > there is a mode-specific foot=yes or bicycle=yes > (...) > > So we need three properties: > > legal right of access, perhaps only needed on ways > > physical ability to pass a gate > > is the gate locked, and if so which modes does that apply to > agree
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