<br>Just as an interesting side note I was mapping an area today that looks like the following.<br><br>a b<br>| |<br>|--c--|<br>| |<br>d e<br><br>c is a short oneway road to a-d, with two lanes (as if it was coming up to a busy junction with lights, but it's an infrequently used residential roads)
<br>b is a two way road, but it can only turn into c and not into e.<br>e is also a two way road, but you can only turn into c and not b.<br>b, c have the same name but that's different to e (c and e actually seem to have equal priority as they turn into c).
<br><br>So I tagged c as one way, and split and end section of b to tag it as one way doing the same to e. That way the arrows should clearly show you can't go from b to e or vise-versa.<br><br>For anybody very interested, a-b is Cardinal's Walk, c-b is Warwrick Close and it should be on the map soon.
<br><a href="http://informationfreeway.org/?lat=51.420238768042466&lon=-0.35984325307692655&user=LwD&zoom=17&layers=B000F000F">http://informationfreeway.org/?lat=51.420238768042466&lon=-0.35984325307692655&user=LwD&zoom=17&layers=B000F000F
</a><br><br>I just thought I'd share as it was a bit unusal and no apparent reason for it. I guess to stop the residential roads being used as a cut through for the A-road and junction that wraps around a-b-e.<br><br>
<br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Gregory<br><a href="mailto:nomoregrapes@gmail.com">nomoregrapes@gmail.com</a><br><a href="http://www.livingwithdragons.com">http://www.livingwithdragons.com</a>