This is an attempt to outline the goals of this style and the principles under which the maintainers make decisions. These rules are not set in stone, they can change and they may not be followed in all cases but contributors should be able to expect that they are generally the guiding principles design wise.
It does not make much sense to try following these principles blindly as a contributor without understanding them, they are meant to guide you to develop an intuition and understanding how to make design decisions to fit into the overall concept of this style.
This style has multiple purposes:
- It's an important feedback mechanism for mappers to validate their edits and helps to prevent unfavorable fragmentation of tag use.
- It's a major part of the public face of OpenStreetMap, for many people the map on osm.org rendered with this style is OpenStreetMap.
- It's used in many map applications as a general purpose map.
- It's an exemplar stylesheet for rendering OSM data.
There is no ranking of these purposes. To allow serving all of them and to avoid satisfying only some at the cost of the others the following main goals have been identified.
The following goals need to be balanced against each other to serve the purposes above. There is no fixed order of priorities. Apart from these goals there are of course also technical constraints and requirements that need to be taken into account.
- Legibility and clarity - The map should be intuitively readable by users with some general experience using maps without a map key, preferrably with relatively little effort. A map key or more extensive experience using this map style can be required for clearly identifying minor differences or the exact meaning of certain features but in broad strokes orientation and identification of map elements should be possible on an intuitive level. We also aim for the map appearance to be esthetically pleasing.
- Being understandable and supportive for mappers - To serve as feedback for mappers and encourage correct mapping this style needs to render the data in a way that allows mappers to understand how the data produces a certain rendering result based on basic observation without in depth understanding how map rendering works or looking at the style implementation.
- Diversity - The style should represent the diversity of the OSM community and geography in general. The most obvious element to serve this goal is showing the local names everywhere on earth in their respective scripts. This goal however goes beyond labels. Both physical and cultural geography differs a lot globally and the aim is to represent this variety with equal determination - well mapped areas are not supposed to have more weight here than less mapped parts of the world. This also means the target map user is the potential global map user and no special consideration is given to the current geographic distribution of actual map use.
- A rich map - This style deliberately creating a fairly rich map showing a significant number of different features. This way it shows the richness of OSM data and gives a broad recognition to the mappers' work. The aim is not however to show all or even most of the OSM data.
- Maintainability - The implementation of this style should not be too hard to maintain. This refers to both the volume and complexity of the code and how fast the style can be parsed when rendering it, which is very important for efficient development work. So the amount of code should be kept small and complex and fragile interdependencies should be avoided. If the code is difficult to maintain this would ultimately seriously affect all of the above goals.
- Adaptability and ease of use - The style should be easy to customize, like for creating localized or special purpose maps. It is also important to keep demands on rendering infrastructure for serving the style low so it is not too difficult and costly to set up a tile server for this style or a specialized variant of it.