Barcodescanning
Barcodescanning is the process of capturing data from barcodes using a device such as a standalone scanner, a camera-based scanner, or a mobile device. Barcodes encode information in a machine-readable pattern of bars and spaces (1D) or in a two-dimensional matrix (2D). Scanners convert the pattern into a digital value that a computer system can interpret, enabling automatic data entry and inventory control.
Barcodes are categorized into 1D and 2D formats. 1D symbologies include UPC and EAN used widely in
Scanning technologies include laser scanners, which project a laser line, CCD/CMOS imagers that capture an image,
Standards and formats are managed by groups such as GS1, which governs many retail and supply-chain barcodes.
Applications span retail checkout, warehouse and inventory management, asset tracking, shipping and receiving, healthcare, and libraries.
History: The barcode was developed by Norman Joseph Woodland and Bernard Silver in the 1940s, with the