Re: Integrating Bar Codes with WebDNA
This WebDNA talk-list message is from 2006
It keeps the original formatting.
numero = 67020
interpreted = N
texte = Tana Adams wrote:> I did find your reference (from 2000) in the talklist archive giving a URL> that offers free barcodes (http://www.unibar.com/eBARZ_WEBDEMO.htm). I'm> just looking into that now. So my concern now is a) generating barcodes for> roughly 10,000 SKUs and b) talking to the barcode software to get the SKU> into the shopping cart.You are still talking about *how* you want to accomplish something, rather than *what* you want to accomplish. You cannot simply generate barcodes for your SKU's (unless you intend to use them strictly internally, see the FAQ listed below).Barcodes are merely machine readable numbers (and possibly letters); nothing more. There are several different international organizations that regulate how you use barcodes in commerce:ISBN - International Standard Book NumberUPC - Uniform Product Code (America only)EAN - The internation version of UPCBookland EAN - a merger of the ISBN and EAN coding, soon to replace ISBN worldwide (in the stupidest possible way)[1]See this page for more details:http://www.adams1.com/pub/russadam/new.htmlThis site contains a wealth of information about barcodes in general.John1. The ISBN-13 address space (the number of available numbers) is rapidly filling up, so in order to expand the number of available numbers, the standards body is adopting the equivalent of the Bookland EAN by adding three more digits to the front of the existing ISBN (and changing the checksum). What is stupid about it is that they are adding a _fixed_ set of digits 978, which makes the number longer, but doesn't increase the number of available unique ISBN's in the slightest."This one goes to eleven" explains it completely... ;-)-- John PeacockDirector of Information Research and TechnologyRowman & Littlefield Publishing Group4501 Forbes BoulevardSuite HLanham, MD 20706301-459-3366 x.5010fax 301-429-5748-------------------------------------------------------------This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing list
.To unsubscribe, E-mail to: To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to Web Archive of this list is at: http://webdna.smithmicro.com/
Associated Messages, from the most recent to the oldest:
Tana Adams wrote:> I did find your reference (from 2000) in the talklist archive giving a URL> that offers free barcodes (http://www.unibar.com/eBARZ_WEBDEMO.htm). I'm> just looking into that now. So my concern now is a) generating barcodes for> roughly 10,000 SKUs and b) talking to the barcode software to get the SKU> into the shopping cart.You are still talking about *how* you want to accomplish something, rather than *what* you want to accomplish. You cannot simply generate barcodes for your SKU's (unless you intend to use them strictly internally, see the FAQ listed below).Barcodes are merely machine readable numbers (and possibly letters); nothing more. There are several different international organizations that regulate how you use barcodes in commerce:ISBN - International Standard Book NumberUPC - Uniform Product Code (America only)EAN - The internation version of UPCBookland EAN - a merger of the ISBN and EAN coding, soon to replace ISBN worldwide (in the stupidest possible way)[1]See this page for more details:http://www.adams1.com/pub/russadam/new.htmlThis site contains a wealth of information about barcodes in general.John1. The ISBN-13 address space (the number of available numbers) is rapidly filling up, so in order to expand the number of available numbers, the standards body is adopting the equivalent of the Bookland EAN by adding three more digits to the front of the existing ISBN (and changing the checksum). What is stupid about it is that they are adding a _fixed_ set of digits 978, which makes the number longer, but doesn't increase the number of available unique ISBN's in the slightest."This one goes to eleven" explains it completely... ;-)-- John PeacockDirector of Information Research and TechnologyRowman & Littlefield Publishing Group4501 Forbes BoulevardSuite HLanham, MD 20706301-459-3366 x.5010fax 301-429-5748-------------------------------------------------------------This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing list .To unsubscribe, E-mail to: To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to Web Archive of this list is at: http://webdna.smithmicro.com/
John Peacock
DOWNLOAD WEBDNA NOW!
Top Articles:
Talk List
The WebDNA community talk-list is the best place to get some help: several hundred extremely proficient programmers with an excellent knowledge of WebDNA and an excellent spirit will deliver all the tips and tricks you can imagine...
Related Readings:
If statement troubles (2002)
OFF-TOPIC: Free webdna.net email addresses ... (2003)
Need help with emailer- 2 issues (1997)
multi-paragraph fields (1997)
[countWords]? (1997)
Templates in Memory (2000)
WebCat2 Append problem (B14Macacgi) (1997)
Fwd: Problems with Webcatalog Plug-in (1997)
$Replace with [founditems] (1997)
filemaker - orderfile (1997)
(slightly off) using menu and [search] (1998)
Prices coming up 0.00 (2001)
WebCatalog/Mac 2.1b2 New Features (1997)
[SHOWNEXT] Examples (1997)
[username],[password] for [authenticate] (2001)
RE: Multiple Stores and WebCatalog Prefs (1997)
verify online (1997)
Shared conversion under WebTen (1998)
shownext (1997)
Webcatalog server support (1997)