Paul The Archivist's Comments
| Changeset | When | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| 108389391 | 9 months ago | Yes I think so also. If you want to alter it go ahead, I don't really have time at the moment to do it myself - it looks like it might be quite fiddly as there are quite a few bus route relations which go across this junction which would need altering if the roundabout junction is removed. |
| 162030216 | 11 months ago | Actually I think these are shops I deliberately didn't include a building=yes tag as they are just part of a building rather than occupying the whole building. The building itself is mapped as a separate area larger than that of the shop. |
| 143126962 | about 2 years ago | I definitely think it's worth rethinking the tagging used in Spain - real ale has a much more specific definition than craft beer - real ale is a term which was invented and defined by the Campaign for Real Ale in the UK. It can be brewed by small or large breweries, not just small craft breweries. By using this it becomes unclear whether somewhere is selling real ale or craft beer. Only the Spanish language wiki page is different - on the English language wiki page it states the tag should be used for "traditional draught cask beers". I'm also not quite convinced that mailing list discussion with just a handful of people involved is really an agreement to significantly change the definition of a well established tag, and change it away from the definition that people use in reality. |
| 143126962 | about 2 years ago | Hi. No, this was for craft beer bottles sold in a shop it is mistagging to use the real_ale tag. To be real ale it needs to have secondary fermentation in a cask or include yeast in the bottle. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_ale. Real ale is mostly sold in the UK only. Thanks,
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| 59681464 | over 2 years ago | Sorry for the delay in replying. Yes, feel free to change them although I'm not sure I'd really think of #b5651d as being light brown, these buildings are probably a typical London brick colour which is paler than that - more of a yellowy brown. |