Brother HL-3260N Printer User Manual


 
APPENDICES
Appendix–29
When EAN 8, EAN 13, or UPC A is selected with the parameter t5 or T5:
Ten numerical characters 0 to 9 can be accepted as bar code data. The
number of characters for bar codes is limited as follows.
EAN 8: Total 8 digits (7 digits + 1 check digit)
EAN 13: Total 13 digits (12 digits + 1 check digit)
UPC A: Total 12 digits (11 digits + 1 check digit)
A number of characters other than above causes data error and the bar
code data is printed as normal print data. If the check digit is incorrect, the
printer calculates the correct check digit automatically so that the correct bar
code data will be printed. When EAN13 is selected, adding + and a 2-or 5-
digit number after the data can create an add-on code.
When UPC-E is selected with the parameter t6 or T6:
The numerical characters 0 to 9 can be accepted as bar code data.
(1) 8 digits Standard format. The first character
must be 0 and the data must be terminated by
a check digit.
Total 8 digits = 0 + 6 digits + 1 check digit.
(2) 6 digits The first character and the last
check digit are removed from the 8 digit data.
*1: For 8 digits, ? can be used in place of a check digit.
*2: Adding + and 2- or 5-digit number after the data creates
an add-on code for all 6 and 8 digit formats.
When Codabar is selected with the parameter t9 or T9:
Characters 0 to 9, -, . , $, /, +, : can be printed. Characters A
to D can be printed as a start-stop code, which can be uppercase or
lowercase. If there is no start-stop code, errors occur. A check digit cannot
be added and using ? causes errors.
When Code 128 Set A, Set B, or Set C is selected with the parameter t12
or T12, t13 or T13, or t14 or T14 respectively:
Code 128 sets A, B and C are individually selectable. Set A encodes
characters Hex 00 5F. Set B encodes characters Hex 20 7F. Set C
encodes numeric pairs 00 99. Switching is allowed between the code
sets by sending %A, %B, or %C. FNC 1, 2, 3, and 4 are produced with %1,
%2, %3, and %4. The SHIFT code, %S, allows temporary switching (for 1
character only) from set A to set B and vice versa. The % character can be
encoded by sending it twice.