The route names should be renamed.
File names:
mexdf.eje1nte.wpt --> mexdf.e001n.wpt etc. (3-digit route numbers, cardinal directions just one-digit)
I'm not sure this is appropriate. The shields spell out the abbreviations, and we have no rules about how many letters to use in file names.
Shields spell out
both abbreviations? Got a link to GMSV of a typical shield, so we can get a better visual of what's going on?
@yakra did start a discussion about it a while ago. We do minimum use 3-digits for route numbering. I've changed dnkpr from 2 to 3 digits because it was the only exception.
Maybe you misunderstood the post. If it's the one I'm thinking of, it was more about changing from "truncate to 3" to "truncate to whatever's necessary for the system". (At the time, I was thinking of expanding out usatxl & usatxs to a uniform 4 digits, as si404 had done with gbna.)
There's another precedent for <3 digits:
usanesI could change it if there's loud enough outcry, but don't see any reason. The numerical part stands for one of Nebraska's 93 counties. I don't foresee 7 more counties being created any time soon.Does this system have 2-digit+ route numbers? If so, Then pad.
If not? Choice is yours? There's the occasional precedent for non-padded systems. As Jim notes, almost everything else is consistently 3+.
WRT eure, si404 explained the reasoning behind why the leading zeros were originally dropped a little while back. I forget exactly why (or whether it was posted here or on GitHub) now... IIRC, something about one route actually having its leading zero signed? And there being a conflict (present, past, potential future?) with a similar-numbered route without the zero? Ack, what was it again?
I generally like to keep things concise, but my preferences here are:
Use Eje rather than E.
Waypoint labels & list names:
Seems Eje may be best? En inglés, Axis. Sounds functionally equivalent to Rd1, Rd2, Rd3, Ave1, Ave2, Pkwy1...
While alphabetic prefixes for numbered route systems have trended short overall, the manual is mum about how to handle them other than when they corresponds to a state or provincial abbreviation. Eje, serving as a generic road type, seems the best fit.
Unless -- is there a shorter, letter-abbreviation the locals use to refer to them?
Roots & filenames:
These have also trended short. Precedent for using a shorter abbreviation than the one used in waypoint labels & list names exists in usatxl & usatxs: TXLp# -> tx.lp# & TXSpr# -> tx.sp#.
OTOH, this dates back to early implementation of usansf on CHM, when guidelines in general were less solidified, and is arguably thus less worthy of consideration.
The manual does say
7. Filename root: The name of the .wpt file with the extension omitted. pa.us019trkpit, oh.oh007, etc. The filename roots are made all-lowercase and follow this formula: (Region without any hyphens) + period (.) + Route (number padded with zeroes for three digits unless the number is 100+) + Banner (if there is one) + Abbreviation (if there is one). FIXME: Some systems have 4-digit routes now.
So this means mexdf.eje#.
I'm not sure about using banners for the directional part. Banners usually mean the routes are related. Here, it's more of a street grid kind of numbering away from a city center. I think of it more like the I-35E/I-35W cases. I'd make them part of the route name, and have a small preference for the 3-letter abbreviations as on signage vs. single letter directional abbreviations.
I'll remain agnostic on whether to include the direction in the route name, or banner, (or even as a single letter) until I have a better for how these routes work, how they're signed...
Right now I'm leaning slightly toward banner, but my opinion could easily change.