The Problem With Some Australian City Names
Some Australian suburb (City) names are not unique inside Australia. For example, there are six suburbs (in five states) called Mount Pleasant.
How Waze Currently Deals With Australian Cities
Non-unique City names can create problems with Waze placing suburb name labels in the wrong place, as well as potentially offering a route that goes to another state instead of to the right street in a nearby City. The boundary of a City might stretch over three or more states. As of this time (10 March 2013), Waze seems to treat each country as a separate State in the Waze World Server, as compared with the USA Waze Server the State is the actual state name in the USA. The effect of this is that there is no separate field for the state in which a City resides so as to differentiate it from the same City in another state in Australia.
If you are editing the map in WME, and have the City layer turned on, you might see a city polygon extending somewhere off the edge of the map instead of being a nice contained region. This can be due to mislabelling of Streets or Landmarks, or it can be due to a non-unique City across Australian states.
Naming Australian Cities
The basis of the City name is the official name of the Suburb or Locality, without applying any abbreviations. The ACT does not have Suburbs or Localities - instead it is divided into 19 Districts which cover the entire Territory. There are also 119 Divisions which cover the populated areas, but only cover 15% of the total area. For the sake of consistency with conventional addressing, the "City" for any ACT location should be the Division if it lies within a Division, or the District if it doesn't lie within a Division.
Note that "St" (for "Saint") in a suburb name is part of the legal name. It should not be expanded to "Saint". If a suburb or part of a suburb is known by a different local name, this can be placed as an Alternative name for that street/landmark.
Whether the City name is derived from a Suburb, Locality, Division or District, it should be spelled in the conventional way for proper nouns (initial capitals), with all capitals \for initialisms - for example, Brownlow KI, where the "KI" is an initialism for Kangaroo Island. The City name may then need modification to make it unique within Australia, as described below:
Each City with a unique name must be named in the following way:
- "<City>". Do not put the suburb name in quotes, just the characters that will be used in the suburb label.
- Examples:
- Parramatta
- Newport Beach
- Brighton-Le-Sands
If there is more than one City with the same name, but the name is unique within the state, it should be named in the following way:
- "<City>, <State>", where <State> is the two or three letter shortened form of the state's name: one of {ACT, NSW, NT, Qld, SA, Tas, Vic, or WA}.
- Examples:
- Gin Gin, NSW
- Gin Gin, Qld
If the City name is NOT unique within the state it should be named in the following way:
- "<City>, <State> <Id>", as shown in the list of Australian Duplicate Cities.
- Examples:
- Mount Pleasant, Qld 4521
- Mount Pleasant, Qld 4720
Using these rules makes the suburb unique within Australia and removes some of the problems outlined above.
If you want to know whether a suburb name is unique within Australia, you can use the following online resources:
- Australian Duplicate Cities (most reliable)
- http://www.ga.gov.au/place-name/ - Set "Place Type" to "Towns & Localities"
A City must have all Streets and Landmarks labelled consistently, so there aren't Newport and Newport, NSW labels both showing on the client screen simultaneously.
"The highlighted road is too far from the city it was added to." message when saving in WME
The current version of WME prevents the naming of a Street or Landmark that is considered 'too far' away from an established City (it's not clear how far 'too far' is). This is a good thing, as it prevents trans-state suburbs and thus prevents 'Smudged Cities'. The problem with this is that WME might not allow you to name widely separated parts of a new suburb. The solution to this is to name and save major roads or highways first, and then name and save the roads that join to these streets so that the suburb is extended gradually instead of trying to label the edges of a suburb first.
A good indication that you may be 'too far' away from the existing suburb is that the suburb name doesn't automatically appear in WME when naming a street as a pop-up option when you type the first couple of letters of the name of the suburb in the City field.
"Smudged" Australian Cities
Occasionally you might see a label of an Australian city in an inappropriate place, far from the place where it is meant to be. This can occur both in the Client (Android, iOS) and in the browser while editing.
These incorrect labels may be the result of an incorrect filled-in City field that has extended that City well beyond of where it should be (a "Smudged" city), or it might be a Zombie City. Zombie cities are shown on the map, but you can't locate a Street or a Landmark that has this City and sufficient time has elapsed for the old City name to have been flushed in a tile update. The main Wiki has a page specifically written to identify city names in inappropriate places - Smudged city.
Occasionally, even if you have fixed up all the City fields, there may remain a city label that remains for no good reason. If you do find such a label, then consult Australian City Merge / Name Change in the Waze forum for instructions on how to request the unneeded label to be removed (or merged into the correct label).