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A "city smudge" or "smudged city" is when the name of a city appears on the client map where | A "city smudge" or "smudged city" is when the name of a city appears on the client map where it doesn't belong. | ||
Waze attempts to connect all roads with the same country, state, city, and road name together. Therefore if someone has labeled a road in California as belonging in Virginia, that city's name will now appear along a band across the US. | Waze attempts to connect all roads with the same country, state, city, and road name together. Therefore if someone has labeled a road in California as belonging in Virginia, that city's name will now appear along a band across the US. |
Revision as of 00:50, 4 August 2012
A "city smudge" or "smudged city" is when the name of a city appears on the client map where it doesn't belong.
Waze attempts to connect all roads with the same country, state, city, and road name together. Therefore if someone has labeled a road in California as belonging in Virginia, that city's name will now appear along a band across the US.
Following is an example of how to resolve the situation, using the city "Fayetteville" appearing in the Charlotte, NC area as the smudge to remove.
Step 1: Identify the problem
- Make note of the name of the city you are seeing. Typically this is found simply by driving with the client active and noticing an unexpected city name appearing on the map.
Step 2: Check the editor for obvious, close errors
- Open up the map editor in the area that you saw the problem. Zoom in and out a few times and make note of the names of cities you see displayed over the map. If you can find the misplaced city name, bingo! Go to Step 5: Find the specific segment.
Step 3: Check for non-local errors in the editor
- In the editor, type the name of the smudged city into the search bar with NO state. Hit enter and a list of options should appear.
- Now one by one, pick each returned result. Similar to Step 2, you want to zoom and scroll around a little.
- You are looking for the smudged city name showing up multiple times like what was found in the Fayetteville, AR area while looking for the source of the Charlotte, NC example:
(NOTE: this is also a good way to find typos of city names)
- Remember to repeat for each result returned by the search bar.
- If you find the smudged city displayed, go to Step 5: Find the specific segment. If not, we have to look harder.
Step 4: Try to find the smudge in the client
- First, change your map color scheme to the "Map editors" theme.
- Using the map on the client, start zooming out and scrolling around. You want to find the edge of the city you are in, and then look for lines coming out of that shaded polygon.
- You will hopefully see the band that represents the smudge passing through your area. It will NOT appear at every zoom level, so zoom in and out and scroll 360 degrees around your city.
- This is what was found due west of Charlotte, NC in our example. Notice the name of the smudged city (Fayetteville) on top of a very thin shaded line running east/west:
- Now without changing the zoom level, scroll along that line to try to find the other end.
- You will pass through other larger city polygons. You want to scroll in the same direction to the other side of that larger city and see if the line comes out the other end.
- If it does, you keep scrolling. If it doesn't come out, then the source of the smudge is somewhere in that city.
- If you then find the name of the smudged city within the city where the line disappears, go on to Step 5: Find the specific segment.
- If you don't find the name, you will also go to Step 5, but you will have no city name to zoom in on, so you have to do a lot more scrolling around.
- If you can't find a line to follow, then it is a real tough smudge to hunt down. Try zooming out even more. For some smudges I have had to zoom out enough to see half of the US before seeing the smudge.
- If you still can't find it, it may be a new smudge that hasn't fully been built into the map tiles OR it may be an old smudge that someone has fixed and the map tiles have not yet updated to remove it.
Step 5: Find the specific segment
- Once you find the general location of the smudge in the editor, zoom into each place the name appears. The problem segment will most likely be under/near one of the names.
- Use the Papyrus Extended Tools add-in to identify segments in the current view. You may need to zoom in, scroll around, and refresh the add-in table numerous times.
- Click the column heading for State and look for things that do not belong.
- Remember there may be only one segment or there may be many. They can be touching or they can be a mile apart. Try to look around even after you think you have addressed all impacted segments.
NOTE: You need to check both ends of the smudge!
- You may find a one-sided smudge where a valid city is extended to the wrong place. Example: Fayetteville, NC appearing in Fayetteville, AR.
- Or you may find a two-sided smudge where an invalid city is in two places. Example: Fayetteville, AL appearing in both Fayetteville, NC and Fayetteville, AR.
- If you find a city with no state or the state showing as "Other", then it is almost certainly a two-sided smudge.
- Although explained as two-sided, they can actually be multi-sided. There was a previously cleaned up smudge of Columbus, Other that spanned 3 states and formed a giant triangle instead of a thin band.
Step 6: Make corrections
- If you have permissions, correct the information for any incorrect segments.
- If you do not have permissions, try to contact the Area Manager for that location.
- If you do not know who the Area Manager is or the Area Manager is unresponsive, post a request with permalink to the Map → Editing → Update Requests board of the forums.
Step 7: Verify corrections
- You will need to wait for a map tile rebuild before you will see any changes! How long is that? It varies.
- Hopefully the smudge will simply vanish, but it may remain or move slightly. This just means that there are more segments out there and you will need to repeat the process to hunt them down.