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Interleaved 2 of 5 (ITF) is a continuous two-width barcode symbology encoding digits. It is used commercially on 135 film , for ITF-14 barcodes, and on cartons of some products, while the products inside are labeled with UPC or EAN .
Then in 1987 it was standardized as JIS-X-0502, [2] a standard physical distribution barcode symbol ITF-14/16/6. The ITF barcode has an add-on version for displaying the weight, etc., and it is possible to encode a 5-digits numerical value and 6-th check character as ITF-6 [3] after ITF-14 or ITF-16 [4] (obsolete in 2010).
Code 93 is a barcode symbology designed in 1982 by Intermec to provide a higher density and data security enhancement to Code 39. It is an alphanumeric, variable length symbology. It is an alphanumeric, variable length symbology.
For instance, encoding the ASCII character "0" can be viewed as 10011101100, where a sequence of 1's is a bar and a sequence of 0's is a space. A single 1 would be the thinnest line in the bar code. Three 1's in sequence (111) indicates a bar three times as thick as a single 1 bar.
When FNC2 is in the final data position, [2]: 5.2.1.2 then the preceding two message characters, digits and uppercase letters in order 1 to 9 then A to Z (for values 10 to 35) shall as "m" and "n" designate where this message belongs in a "m out of n" sequence. As an example, a symbol whose message ends "4 B FNC2" shall be the 4th symbol out of ...
Library Book Barcode Codabar is a linear barcode symbology developed in 1972 by Pitney Bowes Corp. [ 1 ] It and its variants are also known as Codeabar, Ames Code, NW-7, Monarch, Code 2 of 7, Rationalized Codabar, ANSI/AIM BC3-1995 or USD-4.
IATA 2 of 5 [14] [15] (also known as Computer Identics 2 of 5, [16] Airline 2 of 5 [17] [18]) is a variable length, discrete, two width symbology, which is fully similar to Industrial 2 of 5 symbology except start/stop symbols. In this way it has all advantages and issues of Industrial 2 of 5 symbology.
Plessey Code is a 1D linear barcode symbology based on pulse-width modulation, developed in 1971 by The Plessey Company plc, a British-based company. [1] It is one of the first barcode symbology, and is still used rarely in some libraries and for shelf tags in retail stores, in part as a solution to their internal requirement for stock control ...