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Mapping curves

Plasing deur escallic op 28 Junie 2021 in English. Laas opgedateer op 29 Junie 2021.

The amount of segments used to represent a curved feature is based on assumptions. For example, an editor may interpret a mapper’s input by merging points that are too close together. Many aspects of the editing process depend on the drawing of curves, and many parameters are assumed by an editor.

A drag is a gesture well suited to mapping curves. Instead of lifting from a trackpad - an event which can throw the mapper’s precision off - the mapper drags along the feature’s centerline. Such a mode provides more consistent levels of mapping detail, a speedup in which a mapper can trace features, and a more natural feel to mapping. However, it requires more assumptions by the editor used.

In order to draw a line, one may drag from a way. The same gesture may move the map using merely a capacitive touch. I wonder what the current state of dragging is in all of the editors. Does a feature lack curves because it is closer to an urban grid or because it is tedious and/or arbitrary to map.

Dragmode

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Discussion

Kommentaar van escallic op 28 Junie 2021 om 01:09

Here is the gist of it.

Kommentaar van philippec op 1 Julie 2021 om 07:12

I miss Bezier.

Kommentaar van Lejun op 2 Julie 2021 om 08:31

Ha! iD normie problems. JOSM users already have those kind of mapping tools through add-ons like Spline !

(Joking, no offense here, I applaud how you integrated such essential features to iD)

Kommentaar van 4004 op 5 Julie 2021 om 01:46

Not sure if I misunderstood, but didn’t iD offer similar functionality when holding the Shift key? Granted, it’s another key to press

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