Datalogic Hand-held devices II Especificaciones Pagina 16

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Page1 AllAboutBarCodes
UPC (Universal Product Code)
UPC is the standard bar code for items for sale to the public It is the code seen on items at the
local supermarket UPC-A is a xed-length, numeric-only bar code Traditionally, the UPC contains 1
digit for a Number System Character, 5 digits for the manufacturer number, 5 digits for the product
number, and one checksum digit The Number System Character and the manufacturer number,
combined, constitute the Company Prex, assigned by the UCC and EAN standards organizations
The manufacturer assigns the product number, thus creating a unique bar code value for each product
manufactured by over a million manufacturers around the world The UCC has mandated a Sunrise
2005 date, by which time all systems must be upgraded to allow variable length Company Prexes
and product numbers
The UPC bar code can be printed in two formats, a full 12 digit UPC-A form and a compressed 8 digit
UPC-E form UPC-A and UPC-E also allow two or ve digit supplemental numbers UPC-A and UPC-E
codes require checksums
Extended Code 39
Extended Code 39 is a derivative of Code 39 This symbology uses combinations of two standard Code 39 characters for every
character in the ASCII character set (0-127) This symbology allows lowercase letters and control characters, at the expense of
size This makes the code very big if you have very many lowercase or special characters
Most bar code readers in their default conguration will not read Extended Code 39 If you want to use this symbology, you will
probably need to congure the reader If you need to read both uppercase and lowercase, Code 128 may be a better choice
Code 93
Code 93 is a compressed version of Code 39 and Extended Code 39 This symbology supports the same characters as Code 39,
but in a smaller character width Easy to read, very secure (two required check characters), but many readers do not support it
Code 93 has automatic checksums
UCC/EAN-128
This is a special version of the Code 128 bar code which is reserved for use within the EAN/UCC system It is a variable-length
symbol that encodes the values for one or more Application Identiers as dened by the EAN/UCC standards
Codabar
Codabar bar codes can include numeric characters, six punctuation characters (-$:/+), and spaces
There are also four special start/stop characters, which are A, B, C, and D Codabar is useful
for encoding dollar gures and mathematical gures These bar codes are slightly larger than
Interleaved 2 of 5 bar codes
Codabar requires start and stop characters The Codabar symbology is self-checking, but you can use a
mod 16 checksum
EAN/JAN
The EAN/JAN-13 and EAN/JAN-8 codes are similar to the UPC codes, and they are assigned by
international Member Organizations of EAN International for use worldwide The UCC Sunrise 2005
initiative dictates that all North American companies upgrade their systems to read the EAN/JAN
codes, as well as the UPC codes These codes contain a variable number of digits for a country code, a
company prex, a product identication, and a checksum
Figure 9 - UPC-A Symbology
Figure 10 - UPC-E Symbology
Figure 11 - EAN-13 Symbology
Figure 12 - EAN-8 Symbology
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