Hi Bob, The speed parameters can be found in http://trac.openstreetmap.org/browser/applications/rendering/gosmore/elemstyles.xml
Junction types (incl. traffic signals) are not taken into consideration by the gosmore routing algorithm. It may still be a number of months before I find time (and inspiration!) to work on gosmore again. The issues that take priority are : 1. Reviewing and distributing David Dean's WinCE patches. 2. Improving the speed of yournavigation with better RAM usage. Many of the weird routes will then disappear because gosmore will consider all residential roads. 3. Better routing by considering e.g. maxspeed. Perhaps even junction types. Regards, Nic On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 4:09 PM, Bob Hawkins <[email protected]>wrote: > I appreciate this might not be the best place for my question, but > someone might direct me elsewhere if it is not. > > I have posted a route query on > http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/index.php/YOURS/weird_routes and am informed > that the apparent route anomaly created by OSM route service is caused > because trunk road and motorway speeds are greater than motorway link > speeds. I understand that this might be overcome by adding traffic lights > or adjusting speeds in this particular case study. I believe it would be of > great assistance if I should be able to view a list of speeds attached to > highway values that Gosmore, for example, uses and learn how, say, traffic > lights influence route timings. > > I hasten to add that I have very little .xml or coding knowledge and should > prefer to be able to view something in a conventional form. > > I should appreciate any assistance that would advance my knowledge of the > fascinating subject that is OSM. > > _______________________________________________ > Routing mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/routing > >
_______________________________________________ Routing mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/routing
