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A barcode encoding library supporting over 50 symbologies including Code 128, Data Matrix, USPS OneCode, EAN-128, UPC/EAN, ITF, QR Code, Code 16k, PDF417, MicroPDF417, LOGMARS, Maxicode, GS1 DataBar, Aztec, Composite Symbols and more.
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backend_qt4 | ||
cmake/modules | ||
debian | ||
docs | ||
frontend | ||
frontend_qt4 | ||
win32 | ||
cmake_uninstall.cmake.in | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile | ||
readme | ||
readme-cmake | ||
SetPaths.cmake | ||
zint.spec |
Zint and libzint 2.2.2 ---------------------- Zint is a suite of programs to allow easy encoding of data in any of the wide range of public domain barcode standards and to allow integration of this capability into your own programs. This version of Zint is able to encode data in the following formats: Code 11, Standard Code 2 of 5, IATA Code 2 of 5, Industrial Code 2 of 5, Interleaved Code 2 of 5, Code 2 of 5 Data Logic, ITF-14, Deutche Post Leitcode, Deutche Post Identcode, UPC-A, UPC-E, EAN-2, EAN-5, EAN-8, EAN-13, UK Plessey, MSI Plessey, Telepen Alpha, Telepen Numeric, Code 39, Extended Code 39, Code 93, PZN, Code 23, LOGMARS, Codabar, Pharmacode, Code 128, EAN-128, NVE-18, Code 16k, PDF417, MicroPDF417, Two-Track Pharmacode, PostNet, PLANET, Australia Post 4-State Symbols, RM4SCC, USPS OneCode, GS1 DataBar, DataBar-14, DataBar Limited, DataBar Extended, DataBar Stacked, Composite Symbology, Data Matrix, QR Code, Maxicode, Aztec Code, EAN-13, Codablock-F, Micro QR, Korea Post Barcode, HIBC Code 128, HIBC Code 39, HIBC Data Matrix, HIBC PDF417, HIBC MicroPDF417, HIBC QR Code, HIBC Codablock-F, Japanese Postal Code, Code 49, Channel Code, Code One, FIM and Flattermarken. Full documentation is available at project website: http://www.zint.org.uk PROJECT STATUS -------------- Contrary to previous thoughts this project is very much active again. This release signifies the first step in a complete re-think of the API. If you have written applications which take advantage of the Zint API then please make appropriate alterations. Details are given on the news page of the project website. Work is now continuing on making the library more useful for those who want to encode characters beyond the ASCII set. Also in the plan is to bring QR Code encoding within the library and thereby remove the dependence on libqrencode for this. Once this is achieved then Grid Matrix will be the next symbology to be added. By this time I hope to have achived a much more smooth mechanism for encoding both Japanese and Chinese character sets. COMPILING THE CODE ------------------ This package includes files for compiling in a number of ways depending on what functionality you want and what platform you are targeting. Zint has been tested on both 32 and 64-bit systems. It does not use any unusual memory manipulation and so should easily port to a wide range of hardware. GNU/Linux and OpenBSD: To compile the Zint library for you will need libpng and libz pre-installed. You can compile with or without QR Code support. If you want QR Code support you will need qrencode installed. Then: make make install If you do not want QR Code support: make zint_noqr make install For some distributions it may be necessary to run ldconfig as root before libzint can be used. To install the GUI interface you will need Qt4 and cmake. Follow these steps: cd build cmake .. make -j2 make install The command line program can be accessed by typing zint {options} -d {data} Notice that the data needs to be entered after all other options. Any options given after the data will be ignored. The GUI can be accessed by typing zint-qt MS Windows: On the Windows platform you have the choice of compiling with MinGW or with the native compiler, Microsoft Visual C++. To compile with MinGW follow the instructions for Linux above substituting the MinGW makefiles for the default Linux ones. For compiling with MS Visual Studio open the libzint.vcproj project file in the win32 folder and compile in the usual way. Mac OSX: To compile on Macintosh you will need Qt4 and cmake. Follow the steps for the GUI interface as given in the Linux section above. THINGS TO DO ------------ If you are interested in improving this package then here are a few ideas. Backend ------- * Create filters for more output file formats. * Add ECI character support to allow encoding in more languages than are covered by the Latin-1 character set. * The code was developed to be easy to understand rather than efficient so may benefit from some memory optimisation for embedded systems. GUI Frontend ------------ * Allow copying of generated barcodes to the clipboard with a "Copy" button. * Allow dragging and dropping to external apps. Packaging --------- Binary packages are needed for distribution in the following formats * RPMs for various Linux distros (.spec file now available thanks to Radist) * Install binaries for MS Windows (MSVC and MinGW make files now included) * Install binaries for Mac OSX Translations ------------ Documentation is currently only in English. If you have the knowledge and the time please consider translating into other languages. Research -------- The following standards would be welcomed in Zint but the full documentation has not yet been found. * DPD Code * Italian Postal Code CONTACT ME ---------- The home of libzint is: http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/zint and the home for information about Zint is: http://www.zint.org.uk I am keen to hear your ideas / recieve bug reports at robin@zint.org.uk Thanks for your interest in libzint. Happy encoding. Robin.