it is really simple
You guys don't seem to know what yield means...
If a pedestrian has entered the crosswalk, or has started crossing a street without a crosswalk, you must yield. That means they must complete their crossing before you may pass.
In driving, if you are supposed to yield the right of way, it means you let the other person pass first. In an intersection marked with a yield sign, if you see another car coming, but they are not very close, it may seem somewhat ambiguous as to when they are close enough to require you to stop and wait for them, but strictly speaking you must stop if you see someone coming.
For pedestrians crossing a street, it is very simple, once they step into the street, you may not cross their path. It does not matter how many lanes they have to traverse, how slow they are going, or how safe you think it is... Once they enter the crosswalk or step into the street, you must stop and wait for them to pass. THAT is what is meant by yielding.
Didn't they teach you that in driver's ed? Wasn't it on your written driving test?
Yield signs mean stop if someone else is coming. Yielding to someone else means stopping for them. So yielding to pedestrians means you stop. The only exception is that if you can slow down enough to let the other party pass before you must stop, then your yield doesn't require a complete stop. In the case of pedestrians, creeping at them when they are in front of you is frowned upon, so in the case of pedestrians it is safer to always come to a complete stop.
You guys don't seem to know what yield means...
If a pedestrian has entered the crosswalk, or has started crossing a street without a crosswalk, you must yield. That means they must complete their crossing before you may pass.
In driving, if you are supposed to yield the right of way, it means you let the other person pass first. In an intersection marked with a yield sign, if you see another car coming, but they are not very close, it may seem somewhat ambiguous as to when they are close enough to require you to stop and wait for them, but strictly speaking you must stop if you see someone coming.
For pedestrians crossing a street, it is very simple, once they step into the street, you may not cross their path. It does not matter how many lanes they have to traverse, how slow they are going, or how safe you think it is... Once they enter the crosswalk or step into the street, you must stop and wait for them to pass. THAT is what is meant by yielding.
Didn't they teach you that in driver's ed? Wasn't it on your written driving test?
Yield signs mean stop if someone else is coming. Yielding to someone else means stopping for them. So yielding to pedestrians means you stop. The only exception is that if you can slow down enough to let the other party pass before you must stop, then your yield doesn't require a complete stop. In the case of pedestrians, creeping at them when they are in front of you is frowned upon, so in the case of pedestrians it is safer to always come to a complete stop.