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<p>No, I can't think of any real examples at the moment, but that doesn't make them any less existable. And if they exist, then highway=residential_link is more logical than forcing highway=residential and adding link=yes or some other flag to distinguish them.</p>
<p>On 2015-11-10 17:19, Mateusz Konieczny wrote:</p>
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<div class="pre" style="margin: 0; padding: 0; font-family: monospace">On Tue, 10 Nov 2015 13:54:45 +0100<br /> Colin Smale <<a href="mailto:colin.smale@xs4all.nl">colin.smale@xs4all.nl</a>> wrote:<br /><br />
<blockquote type="cite" style="padding: 0 0.4em; border-left: #1010ff 2px solid; margin: 0">Duck test: short link between two primaries is primary_link, so a<br /> short link between two residentials is residential_link. The fact<br /> that it is a very rare scenario does not detract from the fact that<br /> it is existable. Why resort to a different tagging pattern if it fits<br /> in the one we use for other analogous situations?</blockquote>
<br /> I encountered many short links between highway=residential, every<br /> single one was clear highway=residential.<br /><br /> For example see<br /><a href="http://www.openstreetmap.org/way/24789911#map=17/50.06036/19.92942">http://www.openstreetmap.org/way/24789911#map=17/50.06036/19.92942</a><br /><br /> Can you provide an example of real situation where<br /> highway=residential_link makes sense?</div>
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