I'm looking at http://keepright.ipax.at and trying to correct some of the problems in my area. The majority seem to be "This highway intersects the waterway but there is no junction node". This seems to me to be correct as, unless the waterway routinely flows across the road (a ford!) there is no junction. The renderer seems to draw the road over the waterway in the ones I've looked at so far. How do you think I should I fix this? I favour option b. What say you? asked 15 Feb '11, 02:01 vagabond |
I agree with Paul Johnson, the only nodes where roads/rail should intersect water would be fords (or boat ramps), everything else they should be unattached There is of course the odd time where the river (canal, ditch) is actually on a bridge. Of course there is also THIS... canal crosses a river, and Interstate 10 crosses both. Of course it doesn't render accurately. http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=30.04535&lon=-94.149314&zoom=18&layers=M answered 25 Aug '11, 23:47 Sundance You are not entirely right. Osmarender renders it correctly (the bridges).
(26 Aug '11, 00:13)
LM_1
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I recommend not taking KeepRight too seriously here. Just turn off the waterway/highway checkbox and be happy:
If you feel compelled to act, and you know which streams cross at the same level as the road, you can create a junction node and tag it: http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:ford. In times of high water knowing which road crossings are definitely wet can be helpful. answered 25 Aug '11, 19:51 Bryce C Nesbitt To bad you can't turn off the waterway/highway checking in JOSM. The error messages complaining about crossing ways when there is a way on a bridge over a river are a constant frustration to this user.
(20 Sep '13, 04:44)
AlaskaDave
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Go and survey the place and map what is actually there. answered 17 Feb '11, 12:28 ChrisH |
I would recommend option C or D:
answered 15 Feb '11, 02:56 Mike N Some of the ways I've been mapping are tracks and trails across moors and many of these will indeed be fords and therefore pukka intersections. Many thanks for the responses.
(16 Feb '11, 17:00)
vagabond
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Why mark it as a false positive when it isn't? Tunnels should not be marked as a junction nodes, but as ways. See: Key:tunnel I would suggest d). If the waterway flows in a culvert then enter it as a culvert. If the way runs over a bridge, then enter it as a bridge. If it's a ford, then enter it as a ford. If it's an aqueduct, then enter it as an aqueduct, etc, etc.. I advice against filling the OSM database with guesses just to make our debugging tools happy. The tools are there to help us find issues where we may need to collect more fact. By the way I'm more worried about how the routing softwares handle those issues, than the prevalence of a minor artefact in a rendered map intended for the human eye. A strict routing software might refuse to route your wheelchair via the faintly defined crossing with the river. answered 15 Feb '11, 02:52 gnurk 2
Definitely "d". If you've not been to the location, you don't know what's there, do you?
(15 Feb '11, 19:38)
SomeoneElse ♦
1
If the waterway and the highway don't actually cross (due to one being on a bridge or the other in a culvert), is an intersection node actually necessary? My understanding is that such a waterway-highway joined node would be indicative of a ford or a boat ramp, where one could potentially turn off the highway and use the waterway as a route if they were operating an amphibious vehicle or not adverse to swimming...
(16 Feb '11, 17:06)
Baloo Uriza
2
Ways crossing on different layers should not have a common junction node. Otherwise KeepRight will write messages like "This node is a junction of ways on different layers" and "Connected ways should be on the same layer. Crossings on intermediate nodes of ways on different layers are obviously wrong. Junctions on end-nodes of ways on different layers are also deprecated, but common practice. So you may ignore this part of the check and switch them off separately. Please note that bridges are set to layer +1, and tunnels to -1, anything else to layer 0 implicitly if no layer tag is present."
(16 Feb '11, 20:03)
gnurk
Yeah, I've found setting the layer tag for those three levels generally does more harm than good in most cases.
(17 Feb '11, 19:08)
Baloo Uriza
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I would avoid setting layer tags unless you have multiple bridges, or multiple tunnels crossing. Otherwise, let the renderers sort it out, they're pretty good about being able to tell that a tunnel is below the surface, the surface is the surface, and bridges are above the surface. You only really need "layer" tags when you have situations like double-decker bridges on a divided highway, motorway interchanges, major subway stations, and the like, where multiple of the same kind of thing (multiple bridges, multiple tunnels) cross each other.