Prima 3 Driver Manual

6.8. Encoding String

In an encoding environment, there are many parameters that must be configured in order to the encoding to be performed correctly.

We have seen above how to set-up the hardware, a way to configure the formatting and positioning of the data with sophisticated plugins, and now there's one thing left:

The user data that actually needs to be encoded on the card.

Since this data is different for each printed card, it is placed directly on the layout.

The encoding string has a special format that can be recognized by the printer driver. There are several keywords that are reserved and required by the driver to determine what needs to be done.

The basic syntax of an encoding string is:

{pi="<pluginname>" [ft="<formattemplatename>"] [so="<n>"] [pre] [pid="<n>"] [[field1="abcd"] [field2="732894732984"]...] }

Attributes in square brackets [...] are optional.

Attributes in pointy brackets <...> are mandatory.

Double quotes "..." must be present in the string

Double-quotes inside encoding data must be escaped with a backslash before the character, e.g. when encoding the string

John "Doe" Wood

the attribute must look like:

{ pi=... field1="John \"Doe\" Wood" ...}

The encoding string always starts and ends with the curly brackets {...}, containing the encoding information for one encoding. There may be multiple encoding strings on the layout, as described in 6.6.

User Data

The "field1" and "field2" attributes contain the user data that will be encoded and must be named according to the plugin and the used format template. There is no fixed naming convention, so field1 may be Firstname or EmployeeNo or anything else except the reserved keywords (see table below for a description).

The number of user data attributes depends on the plugin and the template format that is used for the encoding string.

Since the encoding string is fixed in the layout, it is the responsibility of the application to replace the variable user data on runtime, when printing the layout.

Many card managements and even other standard applications allow the replacement of placeholders when a job is sent to the printer.

Since almost every application handles variable data in a different way, it is far beyond the scope of this document to give instructions on how to do this. It is recommended to look up the

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