Symbology Characteristics
Your Quick Check 600/800 Verifier can handle bar code symbologies with a variety of characteristics. To help understand symbologies, you should be familiar with the following commonly used terms:
•Code refers to the actual data contained in the bar code symbol, such as a part number, serial number, transaction code or other type of data.
•Symbol refers to the actual arrangement of parallel bars and spaces that encode the data.
•The character set describes the range of data characters that can be encoded in a given symbol. For example, UPC uses only numbers and is called a numeric symbology, whereas Code 39 uses alphabetical characters, numbers and special characters.
•There are two symbology types, discrete and continuous.
•In a discrete code, each character stands alone and can be decoded. Between characters is a loosely toleranced intercharacter gap which contains no information. Every discrete character has a bar on each end. One example of a discrete code is Code 39.
•In a continuous code, there are no intercharacter gaps. Every character begins with a bar and ends with a space. The end of one character is indicated by the start of the next
character. An example of a continuous code is UPC.
•The bar and space widths can vary within or between symbologies; those with only
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Bar code symbologies vary on the amount of information that can be encoded in a given length. Usually, only characters have a specified density, since the overall length of a symbol must include other characters. These other characters may include a start/stop code and a check character.
•A start code is a pattern of bars and spaces that appears at the beginning of a symbol to inform the reading tool where the symbol begins.
•A stop code is a pattern placed at the end of a symbol for marking the end of the data characters. Sometimes the start and/or the stop characters also indicate the scanning direction.
Quiet zones are areas at the beginning and end of a bar code symbol that allow the optical equipment to differentiate a bar code from other printed material. Most of the symbologies in use today are bidirectional; this means that they can be read by a scanner either
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