Notes - OpenStreetMap Wiki
Notes
From OpenStreetMap Wiki
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Help
Notes
In other languages
Afrikaans
asturianu
azərbaycanca
Bahasa Indonesia
Bahasa Melayu
bosanski
brezhoneg
català
čeština
Crnogorski
dansk
eesti
Esperanto
euskara
Frysk
Gàidhlig
galego
hrvatski
Ido
interlingua
íslenska
italiano
Kreyòl ayisyen
kréyòl gwadloupéyen
kurdî
latviešu
Lëtzebuergesch
lietuvių
magyar
Nederlands
norsk
norsk nynorsk
occitan
polski
português
română
sardu
shqip
slovenčina
slovenščina
srpski (latinica)
suomi
svenska
Tagalog
Tiếng Việt
Türkçe
Zazaki
Ελληνικά
беларуская
български
македонски
монгол
русский
српски / srpski
українська
հայերեն
עברית
العربية
سرائیکی
فارسی
پنجابی
پښتو
नेपाली
मराठी
हिन्दी
বাংলা
ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
தமிழ்
മലയാളം
සිංහල
ไทย
မြန်မာဘာသာ
한국어
ქართული
ⵜⴰⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵜ
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
粵語
Other languages...
Notes
Notes/Common errors
Notes/Applications using notes
Notes/API and development
Logo of OSM Notes
Notes
is a core feature of the
OpenStreetMap.org
website. It enables you to add a comment on the map to assist others in mapping/editing OpenStreetMap. Other users can respond to your notes, for example to ask for additional details if necessary.
Example of a valid and useful note can be "a new road was constructed here" or "this shop is closed and does not exist anymore".
Please do not use notes for general discussion or storing information not otherwise used in OpenStreetMap. For example never create notes such as "I was here on Saturday" or "There was a crime at this location".
Although it is not necessary to be logged in to submit a new note, it is beneficial to do so. Logged-in users will receive an email if comments are added to a note or the issue is resolved.
Contents
Using notes
1.1
Adding notes
1.2
Finding your notes
1.3
Viewing notes
1.4
Finding a note via its note number
1.5
Resolving notes
1.6
Reporting notes
1.7
Monitoring notes in a selected area
1.7.1
The Map
1.7.2
Generating a custom RSS feed
1.7.3
GPX export of notes
1.7.4
Web applications for displaying
1.8
Monitoring notes by a specific user
1.8.1
Viewing notes by user
1.8.2
Generating a custom RSS feed
1.9
Hide Notes Markers
Download notes
2.1
Notes dump
2.2
Analysis
See also
External links
Using notes
Do s
Use this feature to report an error in the data or to give some additional information, for instance the name of a street or an address etc.
Don't s
Don't copy from other sources such as
other maps
, even if they do not cost money or are from the government (there are only a few exceptions).
Don't argue. If you have something to discuss, please use some other
contact
channel (a personal message, a mailing list, the forum, or a face-to-face meet-up).
Don't post general comments. A note should relate to the map data at a specific location. If you want to contact the community about something more general, please use a more appropriate
contact
channel.
Don't use notes for yourself in a way which is useless to others. Although you can use notes as a reminder to yourself, you are also inviting others to look at it. Descriptions must make sense to other people.
Don't create automated notes. Notes should be a human-to-human communication. Also avoid noting lots of data bugs which are already reported by automated
Quality Assurance
tools.
The notes feature of OpenStreetMap allows both registered users and the wider public to quickly indicate where there are errors or omissions in the OpenStreetMap data, and for contributors to OpenStreetMap to know where their support is needed.
Adding notes
To add a note, click the bottom tool bar button on the right side of the
main OSM map
Move the marker to the correct position (as accurately as you can). Alternatively, right click the map, then select "Add a note here". Leave a short text message for OpenStreetMap contributors to tell them what's wrong or missing.
Be clear in your message, for example consider that "
path wrong
" says very little of use, but "
The east-west path on the map does not exist on the ground
" is very clear.
If you have an OpenStreetMap account, you should login first to have your note associated with your username, but casual visitors can easily add a note too. If you want to be more than a casual visitor,
create an account
Entered text is treated as a plain text, though for example openstreetmap.org will recognize and autoformat links. Formatting with markdown is not supported - unlike
private messages
and
diary
entries.
Click the image to see the animation:
Finding your notes
To easily find unresolved notes created by (or commented on by) some user (such as your own notes), you can use
My OpenStreetMap Notes
service.
Viewing notes
To view all the current notes for an area go to the
openstreetmap.org
main map display, click the 'layer picker' control on the top right of the map, and select the 'Notes' checkbox (see image).
The note markers have the varying styles shown in the image below:
Notes map symbols
Icon
Description
New note location (while being added)
Unresolved note location
Resolved note location (notes older than 7 days will not be shown)
After selecting a note, you can comment on it, for example, to ask the contributor questions (if they were logged in when adding the note) or to add additional information.
Notes view URL
To create a (perma)link which displays the map with notes already turned on (while not changing other layer selections) use the URL parameter
notes=yes
(for example
openstreetmap.org?notes=yes
or
).
Finding a note via its note number
Example:
finds note 1778161.
Resolving notes
A note added by an anonymous visitor, with details which allow a more experienced OSMer to make map improvements
Notes that are no longer valid should be marked as resolved (requires log in). For example, a note that relates to a map error should be marked resolved once the map has been updated to fix the error. Duplicate or invalid notes should also be marked as resolved.
Resolved notes are not removed or deleted. After a period of seven days they are hidden from view. Hidden notes can be viewed using the RSS feed and the
closed=-1
parameter like this:
See
this question
on the OSM Help forum for more details about how to view hidden notes.
Note that edits should not be made based only on notes, it should be based on contextual analysis and other available sources. Some notes are misleading or false (intentionally or not)
Reporting notes
It is also possible to report notes using the »Report this note« link at the bottom (requires log in, hidden if it is a note created by you). This should only be done in the case of notes containing abusive or illegal content, or where sensitive or confidential information appears in notes. All other kinds of problem, including spam, should be tackled by resolving the note with a quick message explaining what the problem was. If we report a note, then volunteers in the
data working group
need to process this. They can permanently hide inappropriate notes, but it's better not to place demands on their time if this is not required.
Monitoring notes in a selected area
The Map
You can use this map web interface to visualize all notes on the map and search among text of notes by keywords:
NotesReview
Generating a custom RSS feed
You can view and subscribe to an
RSS feed
of all the note activity in your area. This allows you to keep an overview of the things reported in your area you map in.
First, you need to know the coordinates of the area (bounding box) you want to monitor. You can use one of these options to do so:
By clicking on
'Export' on OSM
and then click on the link "Manually select a different area". Then you can drag the corners of the area you want covered in your RSS feed. The values in the left and right boxes (in the 'Export' area on the left) represent the longitude values, the values in the top and bottom boxes represent the latitude values.
By using
OSMCha filters
Then, copy-paste them at the end of this URL:
The notation of the coordinates must be:
smaller_longitude,smaller_latitude,larger_longitude,larger_latitude
Tool
If you do not want to generate the bounding box manually you can use this OSM Quality Assurance Tool:
tyrasd.github.io/osm-qa-feeds/
GPX export of notes
You can export a file (in GPX format) of notes within a bounding box using a link like this:
( bbox=[smaller_longitude],[smaller_latitude],[larger_longitude],[larger_latitude] )
Technically - this provides gpx waypoints where the note number is the name of the waypoint, and the comments are the waypoint description.
Web applications for displaying
See
Applications using notes
for an extensive list.
Overview about Open/Closed OSM Notes on “resultmaps.neis-one.org” is going to be useful. →
“Anton's note viewer” allows you to search notes for user, text, or date range, and get all notes inside a small specified bounding box. →
Load a random OSM note (per country) with a tool by
RicoElectrico
. →
Monitoring notes by a specific user
Viewing notes by user
If a user was logged in while creating or commenting on a note, the note or comment is marked as being posted by that user. You can see all of the notes and comments written by a user on the page
www.openstreetmap.org/user/xyz/notes
(where
xyz
is their user name).
If you want to see only unresolved notes for one (or more) users, you use 3rd party service at
my-notes.osm-hr.org
GitHub source
GitHub
).
Generating a custom RSS feed
The following URL returns the notes of the given OSM username as an RSS/Atom feed. Replace USERNAME in the URL.
Hide Notes Markers
On the OpenStreetMap page on the right is a button for layers, where the checkbox for notes can be seen. This needs to be unchecked to hide the note markers on the map.
open layers and uncheck the notes check box
Download notes
Notes dump
The entire notes database is downloadable from
. The dump file contains notes text, status fields, and all comments, but no hidden notes.
The notes dumps are produced using
iandees/planet-notes-dump
GitHub
An archive of this dump file is also available on
the Internet Archive
on a daily basis. This is particularly useful if you are researching for notes made for a certain date. Archives are available since December 17, 2014.
Analysis
Notes/Offline analysis
Mapbox' comments parser
GitHub
allows you to import a notes dump into a PostgreSQL database for detailed analysis.
global.swing.eu/jive
provides a quantitative online analysis of the note dumps of 2014 and 2017.
See also
The following two
tag
keys:
key:note
– only a similar name, quite different function (used to inform other mappers about non-obvious information about an element)
key:fixme
– partly a similar function (allows contributors to mark objects and places that need further attention)
External links
LearnOSM section to create good notes
, article created by Paowelt and AngocA.
openstreetmap.org
Interface elements
Share map with marker
Map Data layer
Query features tool
Routing
Changeset Discussions
Nearby users
Notes
Top menu
Edit
History
Export
GPS traces
How to upload a GPS
Troubleshooting
Visibility of GPS traces
Layers
Standard
CyclOSM
OpenCycleMap
Transport Map
Tracestrack Topo
Humanitarian
Former:
MapQuest Open
Account
and login
Lost password
Account deletion
See also
Main OSM blog
User diaries
When do I see my work on OpenStreetMap?
Retrieved from "
Categories
Notes
Main OSM website
Navigation menu
US