HellMap's Comments
| Changeset | When | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| 140713047 | over 2 years ago | Note that this area now has both `highway=service` + `area=yes` AND `area:highway=yes`. |
| 140620180 | over 2 years ago | Hi again, When a stream "crosses" a road, there usually is not both a bridge and culvert since those are different structures. A bridge holds/supports the road. A culvert is a tunnel in the ground under the road. So way/1203869225 should either be road bridge or stream/ditch culvert. And these are most likely culverts. |
| 140628555 | over 2 years ago | Hi! The `source` tag is not supposed to be used for Wikipedia links. There is a `wikipedia` tag specifically for those links. Furthermore, this Wikipedia link is for the article about the road itself, not its name. For the street name article and data, the `name:etymology` tags are used, and for Wikipedia it's `name:etymology:wikipedia`. The tags here are already correctly set:
Thanks |
| 140536183 | over 2 years ago | It depends on official maps, names and data. But the drain is most likely not called anything. The connection between the drain and Daugava just doesn't exist anymore, so there is no named stream there. |
| 140536183 | over 2 years ago | I don't live here exactly, but I have biked past here a bunch of few times in the past. I know there are ditches and streams here, although I didn't think any of them as large enough to count as streams. If the steam really connects all the way through this area, then is can probably be classified as a stream. There are a lot of ditches and streams that are not draw on the map yet. |
| 140536183 | over 2 years ago | Ok, sounds good! I'll double-check and fix any issues later. |
| 140537685 | over 2 years ago | Is this stream underground in a pipe? You can also switch the background layer to LIDAR to see how streams flow https://learnosm.org/en/beginner/id-editor/#configuring-the-background-layer This can help drawing them (just note that the LIDAR is not exact). |
| 140562735 | over 2 years ago | Just a note that these footways need indoor tagging scheme rather than covered=yes or similar. |
| 140574589 | over 2 years ago | Hello again, Similar to before, where is the name "Jugla ditch" from? This seems like a highly unlikely official name for a tiny ditch section. |
| 140556815 | over 2 years ago | Looks good, thanks! |
| 140556815 | over 2 years ago | Hello, Unfortunately, this was not a valid fix for this detected issue. You cannot simply "extract" a part of the building to a different layer to avoid the error report. There isn't great Mapillary footage available here, but you can see this is a building passage through the same building https://www.mapillary.com/app/?pKey=108548951312564&focus=photo And if you enable the cadaster layer, you can see it's the same building. These are extremely common in Latvia. Please take care not to guess at the solution if you aren't sure and instead skip it or mark it as "too hard" in MapRoulette. A local may be able to fix it. Thanks |
| 140551569 | over 2 years ago | As I mentioned in changeset/140536183, this minor ditch is almost certainly not a river, please don't change it to such classification. |
| 140537685 | over 2 years ago | You specified that way/1203094652 and further is a tunnel and a pipe - are you sure this is correct? This stream/ditch is visible of LIDAR layer and it doesn't look like it's some sort of underground pipe. If you could explain what you meant, I could fix it and set the right tags. |
| 140536183 | over 2 years ago | Hello! Can I ask where the name "plavūpe" is from for way/1203087391? This is also almost certainly not a river. It could be considered a stream, but it's most likely just a ditch. I'm not sure how you are measuring the width, but it's definitely not 5 meters wide water. Also, tidal=yes shouldn't be specified on any water bodies so far from the coast - none of these are affected by the tides. The geometry of way/1203090258 looks incorrect - it's drawn almost on top of the road but the road here is 2 lanes wide. I fixed some other issues with waterway relations. Notably, there are no tributaries or springs here. I'll leave some additional comments on some other of your changes. Thanks P. S. I can reply in Latvian or Russian if English isn't the best. |
| 140410346 | over 2 years ago | Sveiki! Vai varētu lūdzu precizēt, kas tieši bija domāts ar šo izmaiņu? Cik zinu, šajā posmā nav divvirzienu kustība un sabiedriskais transports to lieto tikai austrumu-rietumu virzienā (no Tilta uz Tvaika vai Ganību, kā tas arī minēts LSM rakstā). Paldies |
| 140351152 | over 2 years ago | reverted as vandalism |
| 140322232 | over 2 years ago | Hello again, Please check the comment I left on a previous changeset. Before continuing with many more changes, please do check your previous edits. This changeset has another example where a new relation relation/15672280 does not include part of the road
Or when you create a relation like relation/15666998 and there is an obvious section in the middle named differently way/24257928 then you should be checking the cadaster data for the street layout and naming rather than creating a relation for incorrect data. As mentioned, there have been multiple previous mistakes too. Just one example of a relation
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| 140246588 | over 2 years ago | Sveiki! Zīmējot pilnu kontūru parastām ietvēm un celiņiem kā piemēram way/1201188517 , šie "laukumi" nebūs
area:highway=*#Differentiation_area:highway_vs._area=yes_on_a_highway |
| 140192765 | over 2 years ago | Hello, Can you please provide more descriptive changeset comments in the future when making so many changes to road relations? osm.wiki/Good_changeset_comments Also, please edit more carefully. There have been multiple imprecise or incorrect relations you have created over time. For example, this one relation/16227717 has literally one tiny segment in it. Another example, where this segment was included way/25867387 yet this one way/706072588 wasn't. This leads to a question of how are you selecting the segments for inclusion? It seems you may be creating these relations by searching the road name rather than actually looking at the map or cadaster data. In relation/16227714 you seems to have "missed" several segments of the road. There is also an open question of having road routes that get "split" in an intersection like relation/15686391 . For road routing purposes, these obviously are part of the same route even if the intersection segment in between is a different road. Thanks |
| 140118798 | over 2 years ago | I almost always put `surface=compacted` on these. Here, there are only rare loose rocks. Personally, if one can bike there without rattling and sliding on rocks, then it's most likely not gravel. To elaborate, there are very few roads that have actual gravel on them, because cars very quickly compact, break and disperse the rocks. Such gravel roads last no more than a season before becoming like this example. In general, I wouldn't put `gravel` until most of the road is actually covered in rocks and they move as you step/bike/drive on them. Basically - rocks are touching each other and forming a layer. Of course, this becomes difficult because many roads do indeed start with a gravel layer, but soon turn into what you see here. This is why a lot of mappers do put gravel everywhere if they see any rocks. As I mentioned - not completely incorrect, but also not that useful for data consumers. To give you a more complex example, https://www.mapillary.com/app/?focus=photo&pKey=177516025291859 This road was repaired by adding a layer of rocks in potholes and the traffic here isn't high enough to turn it into uniform road. Is this gravel? Who knows :) I would probably agree that `gravel` here is okay despite only being in patches and I think most mappers would indeed use `gravel` here. But this will eventually turn into `compacted` unless regularly maintained. I think I have only seen "full" gravel that lasted more than a summer may be a few times around Saulkrasti and it was someone just placing rocks in front of their property to avoid dust or water buildup or for temporary access like construction vehicles. For example, https://www.mapillary.com/app/?focus=photo&pKey=577720461150720 At the intersection, you can already see that rocks are getting crushed and turning into a more uniform mass. |