For example, if it says “bear left” versus “turn left”, what process is it using to make that nuanced judgment?
I see two possible ways:
a) It analyzes the map visually and has an algorithm to decide, based on the angle/curve/etc, which way to describe the turn.
b) Every place where two roads meet has metadata keyed in, indicating what type of turn it is in each direction.
I think option (a) is too expensive to be done in real-time by the end-user’s GPS, so most likely if option (a) is used, it’s done periodically on the server side to generate metadata as in option (b). And then perhaps this metadata is hand-checked by a person, and things the analysis gets wrong are overridden by a person, but all of this is just speculation on my part.
This question came up when some turn-by-turn directions incorrectly said to “bear left” at a standard, right angle intersection. I wondered if someone keyed something in wrong or if there is some little blip in the way the map was drawn at the intersection that we wouldn’t visually detect, but threw off the turn-by-turn.
I expected to easily find an article spelling it out, but I haven’t been able to and it’s driving me crazy not knowing for certain!
My Spanish is mediocre, but typically can get me from A to B without a lot of misunderstandings. I was driving back from the Mall in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and my very British GPS decided to route me via “Calle Ajore.” Now everybody uses abbreviations for the word “street” - and in Spanish uses “C.” For “Calle” just like English uses “St.”
So, I’m battling traffic, and Lady Winifred Windsor the GPS advises me to “Turn right to see a whore.”
Lady Winifred was just looking out for your mental health after she detected your road rage setting in.