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I added a few paths in OSM. They are visible in other gps applications that use OSM (such as afstandmeten.nl), but routing does not go via these paths, even though it is the shortest route. How do I add paths that can actually be used in other GPS applications?

asked 22 Mar '20, 18:58

JustNicci48's gravatar image

JustNicci48
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Can you tell us explicitly which application does not road over which way? I see two ways you created that can be routed via (1, 2). A third way you have just deleted so it is hard to say what might have been wrong.

(22 Mar '20, 19:50) TZorn

If the paths are unset it could explain why they are not routable. Unless the paths were tagged as foot=allowed or foot=designated i have noticed they won't route with Garmins i have used.

(23 Mar '20, 00:12) andy mackey

Looking at those two examples one is tagged as cycle and one is not. If you try cycle routing via them one works and one does not, but if depends if you use OSRM or Graphopper for some reason.

(23 Mar '20, 00:23) andy mackey
1

Your path works for both OSRM and Graphhopper, for both foot and bicycle routing in each case. So you probably need to ask afstandmeten.nl to be sure why their routing gives a different result. It may be related to access tags as andy mackey suggested above. However that seems odd to me, I would expect a path to be open to non motorized traffic unless the access tags specify otherwise.

(23 Mar '20, 15:16) alan_gr

How long ago did you add the paths? Changes can take a while to feed through to routing engines, sometimes longer than changes to map tiles - the fact that a change is visible on the map does not guarantee that it is being used for routing.

If you don't think that is the issue, maybe post a link to a specific path so we can look at whether something might be blocking the routing.

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answered 22 Mar '20, 19:48

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alan_gr
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I added path Polderstraat weeks or months ago. To me, it looks the same as path Rabauwakkers, which was created by someone else. On the website www.afstandmeten.nl (used for creating routes and calculating distances), the second one will be used in routes, whereas my path will not...

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answered 23 Mar '20, 13:45

JustNicci48's gravatar image

JustNicci48
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edited 23 Mar '20, 13:47

2

as mentioned elsewhere, it all depends on the frequency of the data updates. While your change is in OSM's database, it might take takes or even months before afstandmeten.nl updates their data.

(24 Mar '20, 04:34) escada

This side by side view of the two paths and their Tagging (in Potlatch2 edit mode and advanced mode) you will see that the tagging is slightly different. One has foot=yes tag the other does not. This, i think will explain what you have discovered.

alt text

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answered 23 Mar '20, 17:37

andy%20mackey's gravatar image

andy mackey
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edited 23 Mar '20, 17:38

1

We should note that both ways should yield the same results. A path should be accessible/routable by foot and by bicycle by default. As alan_gr observed above, JustNicci should contact the site/app that does not route correctly here to fix their rules. There is no need to alter the data.

(23 Mar '20, 20:27) TZorn
2

A path should be accessible/routable by foot and by bicycle by default

If you route with that assumption in all countries, then your routing will be terrible. Whatever it says in the wiki, this is not an observation that is consistently borne out in the field.

(24 Mar '20, 08:44) Richard ♦

You might be right that a universal rule comes with some problems. But that's why communities have tried to define some country specific rules (Wiki: Access_restrictions) The general definition in Belgium (and in the Netherlands where the website seems to originate) is that a footway is good for foot traffic, a cycle way is good for bicycles and a path is good for both. If you want to have that differently you should tag it.

I would consider a router that does not route pedestrians via a footway in Belgium to be broken.

But I rather suspect that afstandmeten.nl has just not updated their data in a couple of months.

(24 Mar '20, 13:26) TZorn

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question asked: 22 Mar '20, 18:58

question was seen: 1,480 times

last updated: 24 Mar '20, 13:26

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