I believe that you haven't explicitly said so, but probably essentially
want to be able to find streets that haven't been surveyed and
potentially need a oneway tag and avoid false positives (aka such that
are actually bi-directional).

I don't believe you'll get any further with the oneway tag, but given
that we have similar issues for example with name tags, you could
consider something like proposed in
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Proposed_features/Internal_quality ,
in your case

validate:no_oneway


Simon

PS: the noname tag is actually substantially more popular than
validate:no_name but if you are inventing something new, you might as
well stick to the validate: scheme.


Am 28.08.2014 16:32, schrieb Xavier Noria:
> For the sake of discussion, I believe the interface for setting this
> attribute could be different (I am a software developer).
> 
> For example, in graphical interfaces like iD you could have "no"
> preselected as convenience. But if you send "no", you are saying "no".
> Otherwise, you could opt-out and leave the value as blank, that
> would mean "unknown"/"unset".
> 
> In APIs, the attribute would have no default. If you say "no", it is
> "no", if you send nothing, it is "unset".
> 
> That way you could distinguish "no"s from "unset"s. Right now you
> cannot because conventions promote saying nothing.
> 
> I realize changing any of this may be impossible nowadays, and maybe
> you disagree with that proposal. But if there was a chance to revise
> this I know Ruby on Rails and could work on it.
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Tagging mailing list
> Tagging@openstreetmap.org
> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging
> 

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