Scanning Bar Code

  • Thread starter Charles L. Phillips
  • Start date
C

Charles L. Phillips

Hello,
Where can I find examples of code for scanning bar code.
Does ANYONE have suggestions for a book or 2 on designing around bar code???
 
R

Rick Brandt

Charles L. Phillips said:
Hello,
Where can I find examples of code for scanning bar code.
Does ANYONE have suggestions for a book or 2 on designing around bar code???

In my apps we use the BarCode scanners that connect through the keyboard connection.
The scanned data looks to Windows (and your app) exactly the same as if someone had
typed it on the keyboard so little special programming is required beyond insuring
that the data is correct and goes into the correct field.
 
T

Thomas Lutz

Most bar code readers are available with one of two output options.
The first option is called "Keyboard Wedge" output where you unplug
your keyboard, plug the bar code reader into the keyboard port on your
PC and then plug your keyboard into the bar code reader. This
arrangement makes the bar code reader appear as it it were simply a
second keyboard. Your original keyboard continues to work as normal
however when you read a bar code, the data encoded in the bar code
appears to any application running on your PC as if it were typed in.
The keyboard wedge interface is extremely simple however it has a few
drawbacks. If you swipe a bar code, the cursor has to be in the
correct input field in the correct application otherwise you end up
reading bar code data into whatever application has the focus. This
can cause all sorts of potential problems as you can imagine. The
keyboard output also is limited in that you cannot modify the data in
any way before sending it into the program that is to receive the
data. For example, if you needed to parse a bar code message up into
pieces or remove some of a bar code message or add in a date or time
stamp you would not be able to with a normal keyboard wedge reader.

The other possible output option is to get a bar code reader with an
RS232 or "Serial" interface. With these types of bar code readers, you
connect the reader to an available serial port on the back of your PC.
You would then need a program called a "Software Wedge" to take the
data from the bar code reader and feed it to the application where you
want the data to go. The disadvantage to this approach is that it is a
little more complex however you gain much more control over how and
where your data ends up when you read a bar code. With a Software
Wedge, you can control exactly where the data goes in the target
application and you can also perform all sorts of modifications on the
data before it is sent to the application.

The company that I work for sells a product called WinWedge which is a
Software Wedge for Windows.

We also sell a very high quality bar code ActiveX control for printing
bar codes.

Visit: http://www.taltech.com for more information. This web site is
also an extremely good place to obtain information about bar coding in
general. Look in the Resources section of the site for tutorials on
bar coding. It should help clear up the fog.
 

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