Please keep in mind that round-trip is in considerable use to describe the overall geometry of cycling and hiking routes. Don't change the meaning.
On Mon, 23 Dec 2019, 11:09 Peter Elderson, <pelder...@gmail.com> wrote: > True! I have seen a few educational or theme routes that way. In that > case it's meant to be a roundtrip, or you make a roundtrip using the same > way back by necessity. > Regular linear hikes are not meant to be used as roundtrips, though you > could go back the same way of course. > > I would use roundtrip=yes only for routes designed for roundtrips. Which > can encompass a lot of geographical layouts, even single chain linear > routes as illustrated by your example. A closed_loop would automatically > qualify as a roundtrip, I think, but I trust someone will come up with an > exception! > > Fr gr Peter Elderson > > Op ma 23 dec. 2019 om 08:52 schreef Martin Koppenhoefer < > dieterdre...@gmail.com>: > >> >> >> sent from a phone >> >> > On 22. Dec 2019, at 16:43, Peter Elderson <pelder...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > >> > A linear walking route marked in both directions is not a roundtrip. >> You're not guided to turn around at the end and return to the start. >> >> >> there are cases where it’s unavoidable, because there is only one way. >> >> Cheers Martin >> _______________________________________________ >> Tagging mailing list >> Tagging@openstreetmap.org >> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >> > _______________________________________________ > Tagging mailing list > Tagging@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging >
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