une abeille's Comments
| Changeset | When | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| 147223348 | almost 2 years ago | This pond appears to be fictitious. Removed.
|
| 147304818 | almost 2 years ago | Welcome to the community, and thanks for contributing. :) |
| 147240344 | almost 2 years ago | Hi there, I believe you may have inadvertently changed this building back to its old shape. Bing imagery is from 2020, and this appears to be what you traced. Esri imagery is from May 2023 and shows a geometry much closer to what this building looked like before your edit. Could you please double check? |
| 147234473 | almost 2 years ago | If you switch to Esri imagery you can see the actual footprint of the building, if you'd like to refine this changeset to be as accurate as possible. The existing geometry represents the entire lot, not just the building. |
| 147222684 | almost 2 years ago | Yes, sorry, it was a copy-pasted message I was sending to all the new accounts from today, so that if they keep contributing they'll have the right information going forward. I wonder if the RTL stuff would be importable in any way now that everything is semi-merged under the ARTM? |
| 147226882 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
It appears that you have drawn a cycle path on a road that was already tagged as having one. (way/1160738173) It is difficult to tell from looking, but this way has tags that indicate the road has a dedicated cycle path. Renderers such as CyclOSM use this to display the cycle path. It's also good practice to keep your changes local to one area. If you'd like to edit things in multiple cities or countries, please save your work before moving on to the next one. :) Thanks for contributing! |
| 147222170 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
It looks like you have created a duplicate of an element that already exists. (Original: way/78567717, yours: way/1247689595.) If the park is indeed under construction, you should add this information to the tags of the original park, not as a description. Descriptions do not actually change things on the map in a way that can be used by renderers. Thanks for contributing! |
| 147222765 | almost 2 years ago |
Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
In addition, please try to make your changeset comments descriptive. Other mappers should be able to tell what you changed based on your description.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147224257 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
I see that you have added a park node here and requested review. Generally parks are drawn as areas, not nodes. But this appears to be a school grounds, so it should probably not be marked as a park. Thanks for contributing! |
| 147223144 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
Could you provide your source for the changes to this "playground?" It appears to be a skate park on aerial imagery, and it seems that it was correctly tagged already. Is the name official? Thanks for contributing! |
| 147223698 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
For shops that have closed, please tag them as vacant rather than writing a description. You may also wish to remove the shop name and contact information, as they are no longer relevant.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147222512 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
For shops that have closed, please tag them as vacant rather than writing a description. You may also wish to remove the shop name and contact information, as they are no longer relevant.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147222814 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147222723 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147223348 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
In addition, please try to make your changeset comments descriptive. Other mappers should be able to tell what you changed based on your description.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147222413 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147222684 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147222931 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147223837 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
In addition, please try to make your changeset comments descriptive. Other mappers should be able to tell what you changed based on your description.
Thanks for contributing! |
| 147223867 | almost 2 years ago | Hello, and welcome to OpenStreetMap! If you're new to contributing, please make sure to read the wiki if you are unsure about anything. It contains a beginner's guide, as well as detailed information on all common map elements and standards.
In Montreal we use an offset of 0.6, -1.54 for the 2020 Bing imagery that is the default in iD editor. If you draw or realign elements, please change your offset to this value in iD by going into the Background Settings (shortcut: B key) and scrolling to the bottom to find Imagery Offset.
Thanks for contributing! |