ponzu
14
Trying to get some kind of closure here, I will list a few permalinks and resist the temptation to make anymore edits so that my examples are still valid overnight.
In my opinion, the adjacent Eldorado and Vintage clubs shown here http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=33.70654&lon=-116.35241&zoom=15&layers=M look every bit as nice and are tagged as fully as the Indian Wells Country Club shown here: http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=33.71304&lon=-116.31469&zoom=15&layers=M The former are drawn following just my first DO. The latter follows the first and second DOs plus the additional advice to interleave a polygon for the residential parts. That represents about 20 minutesā worth of extra more work. Is it worth it?
Compare these to the three clubs and five courses shown here: http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=33.71304&lon=-116.31469&zoom=15&layers=M From left to right:
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La Quinta Resort and Club Mountain Course: a combination of two separate simple polygons, each tagged with name. At zoom level 15, the name is shown once, but it is in āno manās landā. At zoom level 17, both names are shown, one on green, one on blank land.
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La Quinta Resort and Club Dunes Course: same configuration, same issue.
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La Quinta Resort and Club Citrus Course: a combination of four separate simple polygons, of which three, incredibly, are attached. Same rendering issue where at zoom level 16 all four names are rendered. Moreover, the map user has no idea of the shape or size of the La Quinta Resort and Club, which encompasses these three courses. The only possible good of this approach is visual delineation between the three courses, which otherwise would be lost inside a massive green blob called La Quinta Resort & Club. The question is how to preserve this useful feature, while combating the shortcomings.
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La Quinta Country Club (you would think they could come up with less confusing names) is comprised of a multipolygon and two simple polygons, each tagged with name. Already at zoom level 15 two of the names are showing, at level 16 all three are. Again, way too much blank land in between green blobs, leaving room for imagination as to which of three adjacent clubs it belongs to.
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Rancho La Quinta Country Club: a more convincing tracing job with an impressive multipolygon that covers most of the property and holds well together if not for a hard to explain extra polygon on the NE corner, whose name comes through at zoom level 16, and a tagging mistake on one of the inner holes which causes the name to be rendered along the way (easily fixed).
In comparing all these examples, I donāt want to go too far too quickly in the direction of a pretty map. Tagging and tracing have to be useful for a variety of purposes. (I like your sample questions: How many golf courses in Palm Springs? Which is the biggest golf course in Palm Springs?) I guess I want to have it all: show the interconnectedness of the golf course and the residential community AND nail the size and shape of the golf course proper. Iād hate to find out that the answer points back to what I though was an overdone effort on the Indian Wells Country Club.