I agree with Mateusz that the wiki IS the project's standard document for
the meaning of tagging (from the perspective of data consumers) and how to
tag (from the perspective of mappers).  Note that both perspectives are
important.  But to address the specific point, there is no standard
document for renderer implementers, because there is no such thing as a
standard renderer implementation.  A renderer (something that turns data
into a map) is just one of very many ways to use and visualize geospatial
data.

I know you did not intend to criticize the volunteers that make this
project happen, but consider that when you dismiss the wiki as "no
documentation", it can be interpreted as dismissing the hard work of
countless people that volunteered their time to develop (and translate!) a
large and complex documentation base.  Most software developers find
documentation to be a chore and the last thing they deal with.  That is why
as someone who has the skills, time, and interest to contribute, I've
expended considerable effort improving the wiki's tagging documentation,
and when I've found gaps or problems, I've worked to draft and advance
proposals to address the deficiencies.  I saw a need and began filling it,
and my contributions to that documentation are something I am proud of.

For a project that provides its only product for free, it should be obvious
why the OSM Foundation has a small budget and can't afford to hire more
than a cursory staff for the most critical needs.  Consider changing your
perspective to "what am I able to contribute to make this project
stronger?" rather than "here are the things that are wrong".

As the author of a product that consumes OSM data, I am grateful to all of
the programmers, mappers, and technologists that have built the various
pieces of this ecosystem without which my product wouldn't exist.  It would
be awfully presumptuous of me to complain that this thing provided to me
entirely for free is in some way lacking, and I'm glad I am able to "give
back" in this small way.

This is just a gentle reminder that when you speak of "OSM", you are not
speaking to some big corporate entity with a glass lobby, a receptionist,
and someone to answer the phone -- you are speaking to a loose tribe of
individual volunteers that are collaborating on a free map of the world.

On Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 4:15 PM Mateusz Konieczny via Tagging <
tagging@openstreetmap.org> wrote:

>
>
>
> Dec 14, 2020, 22:03 by and...@torger.se:
>
> Ok, understood. However as far as I know OSM lacks a standard document
> for render implementors to actually know how data should be interpreted.
>
> In part it is https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/ in part it is decision of
> authors of map style how they want map data to be intererpreted.
>
> The only reason I get here is when the OSM wiki doesn't have answers
>
> Yes, you are raising some very interesting cases (for example case of
> mountain
> and peaks named separately).
>
> Even here there are various answers and ideas circulating
>
> This is whole point of tagging mailing list for features with no known
> good way of tagging them. (or where it is not documented)
>
> _______________________________________________
> Tagging mailing list
> Tagging@openstreetmap.org
> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging
>
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